March 2018

Page 24

CONGRESS RACES THE CLOCK IN QUEST TO BRING STABILITY TO THE INDIVIDUAL INSURANCE MARKET BY J U L I E ROV N E R 22

MARCH 2018

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ONGRESS IS RUNNING OUT OF TIME if members want to come up with legislation to stabilize the individual insurance market. While Republicans and Democrats still feud over the fate of the Affordable Care Act, a bipartisan group of senators and House members has been working since last summer on measures to keep prices from rising out of control and undermining the individual market where people who don’t get insurance through work or the government buy policies. They hope to attach a package of fixes to what should be the year’s final temporary spending bill, due in late March. The lawmakers are up against not just the legislative clock, but also the insurance companies’ timeline. Insurers have until summer to decide if they want to continue to sell policies in the ACA marketplaces, but many start making preliminary decisions as early as April. In the absence of congressional action, insurers say premiums will go up in 2019 due to the uncertainty — raising costs for consumers and the government. It is by no means clear whether any package could gain the votes needed in the House and Senate. Most Republicans are loathe to be seen “fixing” Obamacare, although opinion polls clearly show they will be blamed for problems with the law going forward. The bipartisanship extends beyond Capitol Hill. Recently five governors (three Democrats, one Republican, and one Inde-


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