TPM
The legislation,
offered by Rep. Todd Young (R-IN) and 208 co-sponsors as a tweak to
Obamacare, would change the definition of a full-time work week under
the health care law from 30 hours per week to 40 hours. The aim was to
mitigate the effect of the law's employer mandate, which says businesses
with 50 or more workers must offer insurance to full-time employees.
An analysis of the bill, released Tuesday by the nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office and Joint Committee on Taxation, found that
it would cause 1 million people to lose their employer-based insurance
coverage. The report projected that more than 500,000 of them would end
up getting coverage through Medicaid, the Children's Health Care Program
or the Obamacare exchanges. The rest, CBO and JCT said, would become
uninsured.
The legislation would also lower the amount the federal government
collects in penalties from businesses who don't abide by the employer
mandate. As a result, the report found, the deficit would go up by $74
billion over 10 years.
Titled the "Save American Workers Act," the bill cleared the House
Ways & Means Committee on a party line vote earlier this month and
was slated for a full House vote perhaps as early as next week. Of the
bill's 208 cosponsors, seven are Democrats.
The CBO findings are problematic for Republicans in part because
they've raised hell about insurance cancellations and market disruptions
due to Obamacare's minimum coverage standards and other provisions.
A spokesman for Young didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
"[A]s the administration continues to stumble through implementation
of the law, many Americans are still confused with how this sweeping law
will work and what its impact will be," the congressman said upon
introducing his bill. "Repealing this redefinition [of 'full time
employment'] and restoring it to the historical norm ensures this bill
not only protects working poor and middle class employees, it also
ensures that laws governing employment are consistent."
The reality, it appears, is less simple.
"I think this shows that [the Republicans'] repeal agenda will
actually hurt or destroy jobs, and make it harder for people to get
health insurance," said Alex Nguyen, a spokesman for Democrats on the
Ways & Means Committee.
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