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Washington (CNN)In a major victory for President Donald Trump, the House has voted to dismantle the pillars of the Affordable Care Act and make sweeping changes to the nation's health care system.

The bill now heads to the Senate where it faces daunting challenges because of the same ideological splits between conservative and moderate Republicans that nearly killed it in the House.
 
 
After a dramatic week of negotiations, lobbying from Trump and Republican leaders, the vote ended with 217 GOP lawmakers backing the measure. Twenty Republicans opposed it, as did all House Democrats.
Republicans immediately boarded buses to the White House, where they will appear with Trump in a celebratory moment.
Democrats were unable to stop the GOP vote aimed at President Barack Obama's signature legislative achievement. But after the final vote was cast, they chanted "nah nah nah nah hey hey hey goodbye" to their Republican colleagues, with a few members waving, as they believe the vote will lead to many GOP lawmakers losing their seats in the November 2018 midterms.
Thursday marks a political milestone -- one that has painfully eluded Trump and House leaders for months. The controversial health care bill delivered Trump the biggest political defeat of his short presidency in March, when the legislation had to be yanked from the House floor because it simply didn't have enough support.
Under pressure from an antsy Trump looking to score a big political victory, Republican leaders tried again last week, hoping to to get to 216 votes ahead of the President's symbolically important 100-day mark in office. That effort, too, failed.
Pelosi to GOP on health care bill: 'You will glow in the dark on this one'
 
Before the vote on the House floor, House Speaker Paul Ryan made the case that Republicans had no choice but to work to put Obamacare -- what he called a "failing law" -- behind them. "Let's give people more choices and more control over their care."
"Let's return power from Washington to the states," Ryan said.
"A lot of us have been waiting seven years to cast this vote." Ryan said. Many lawmakers, he added are "here because they promised to cast this vote."

'Rocky' plays in GOP meeting

Thursday morning, Republicans were already in a celebratory mode. The theme song to "Rocky" played as members filed in to a meeting in the House basement.
The 11 states most likely to be affected by pre-existing conditions all voted for Trump
 
Rep. Daniel Webster described Ryan as almost "giddy."
Asked if he will be relieved when all of this is over, Virginia Rep. Dave Brat said simply: "Highly!"
When it came time for House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy to speak in the meeting, an image of Gen. George S. Patton popped up on the LCD screens in the room. McCarthy proceeded to roll off several motivational quotes from Patton to urge the conference along.
There was also high praise for Trump: New York Rep. Chris Collins credited the President for getting the bill across the finish line. "This was Donald J. Trump, the negotiator getting it done," Collins said.
Before the final vote, the House unanimously passed a separate bill that will ensure members of Congress and their staffs are subject to the rules of their new health care measure. Originally, Republicans were under fire after it was reported that they wouldn't be subject to the rules of their own bill. Republicans said that they were required to include the exemption under Senate rules.

Democrats ready for 2018 fight

Democrats, for their part, are poised to hold the health care bill over the heads of Republicans next year.
As anxious reporters stood outside of Ryan's office Wednesday night, waiting for guidance on whether there would be a vote Thursday morning, Democratic Rep. Elijah Cummings approached the group to joke that he had a "breaking" announcement.
Republicans had the votes on their health care bill, Cummings said. His punchline: And Democrats will take back the House in 2018.
As originally introduced, the GOP bill would leave 24 million fewer people insured by 2026 than under Obamacare, the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office said. There will not be a new CBO report before Thursday's vote on the legislation.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi blasted the bill and timing of the vote.
Health care win could be shot in arm Trump, GOP need
 
"Do you believe in what is in this bill?" she said Thursday. "Some of you have said ... well, they'll fix it in the Senate. But you have every provision of this bill tattoos on your forehead you will glow in the dark on this one."
The remark was met with cheers and applause.
"You will glow in the dark," she repeated. "So don't walk the plank."
But the weight of the moment -- Republicans being able to start the process of replacing Obamacare -- was not lost on Democrats.
Off of the House floor, Democratic Rep. Emanuel Cleaver just raised his left pant leg to a CNN reporter huge scars he has on his knee. He says he has had six surgeries, two to replace his knee.
"I'm thinking about the people back home who are hurting. I'm talking about myself. I mean, I'm a pre-existing condition," he said. "It's not apolitical game for all these people out here in the country who are hurting and scared to death."
Cleaver said when Obamacare was enacted in 2010, he never could have imagined that this day would come.
"I thought that even though this place has become toxic, that nobody would jeopardize the health of millions of people for some political purpose," he said. "And the number is still 24 million people who will be without health coverage."

What's in the bill?

The GOP health care bill would eliminate Obamacare taxes on the wealthy, insurers and others, and get rid of the individual mandate imposed by Obamacare, officially known as the Affordable Care Act. Instead of the Obamacare subsidies that are tied to income and premiums, the GOP plan would provide Americans with refundable tax credits based mainly on age to purchase health insurance.
The legislation would also allow insurers to charge higher premiums to those in their 50s and early 60s, compared to younger consumers.
House bill would face daunting challenges in Senate
 
It would also significantly curtail federal support for Medicaid and allow states to require able-bodied adults to work. After 2020, states that expanded Medicaid would no longer receive enhanced federal funding to cover low-income adults, and those that hadn't expanded would be immediately barred from doing so.
And it would allow states to relax some key Obamacare protections of those with pre-existing conditions, which are among the health reform law's most popular provisions. States could apply for waivers to allow insurers to offer skimpier policies that don't cover the 10 essential health benefits mandated by Obamacare. Also, insurers would be able to charge higher premiums to those with medical issues if they let their coverage lapse. States requesting waivers would have to set up programs -- such as high-risk pools -- to protect insurers from high-cost patients.
An eleventh-hour amendment that helped seal the missing GOP votes would add $8 billion over five years to fund high-risk pools and go toward patients with pre-existing conditions in states that seek waivers under the Republican legislation. The legislation already included $130 billion in the fund.
However, the GOP bill doesn't touch one another beloved piece of Obamacare -- letting children stay on their parents' insurance plans until the age of 26.
This story is breaking and will be updated.
 
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I hope whatever the Republicans can pass will cut drastically the deductible amounts that the Insurance companies have implemented under Obamacare (aka Democratic Healthcare).  Not only did my families health insurance deductible raise from $400 to an unbelievable $4000.00 BEFORE any insurance payment is made but the price I paid for that insurance doubled.  Contrast that to what it was before the Democrats got involved when Obama' had his first term and healthcare insurance along with the healthcare was suddenly anything but affordable.

The only ones helped by Obamacare was those who didn't work at all or were living off the Government in the first place.  Democrats complained saying that their intervention was necessary because so many were not covered by insurance or was not insured.  What they did was essentially make many millions more Uninsured.  Families like mine had insurance but because of the amount of money they had to pay out of their pocket BEFORE any insurance was to pay their usual 80% toward remaining bills effectively meant that other than the most dire cases non one ever saw insurance pay anything at all meaning effectively we became uninsured.   It was as if we suddenly had to pay our entire medial healthcare cost entirely ourselves.   That is what the Democrats gave us. 

Now it's time to see if the Republicans can fix it.  What happened today was nothing and changed nothing.  The Senate has to pass the same thing and the President sign it before it's law and changes anything.   Meanwhile what should change is medical healthcare providers should be required to provide pricing information to patients as to what they charge for various procedures.  As it is most families and people don't know what procedures cost until they get the bill from the provider.  

Again, regarding my family, and our Doctor, before Obamacare we paid around $45.00 for a routine doctor's visit or routine appointment where today that same basic appointment is $140.00.  A lab bill for standard blood test used to cost us around $19 to $39 where as my last bill for a standard blood test was $480.00.  

Now I don't actually know if the actual medical cost have increased due to the Democrats intervention into the whole process but I also don't know that there is anything to disprove that their intervention helped increase these cost.  All I do know is that things took a drastic turn downward when the Democrats got involved in something that should have been left alone and that some of the reasons that health insurance skyrocketed is the mandatory (dictated by the government (democrats)) coverage for sex changes, contraception, abortions, and many other types of procedures be included in insurance coverages under Obamacare.  The other thing that seemed to change was that the government essentially by implementing the mandatory coverage for pre-existing conditions meant that people could wait to purchase insurance until they actually contracted a major illness and only suffer by having to pay, the government, a small fine.  Small compared to the cost of any healthcare insurance policy under the same government.

Now the Democrats are screaming that the Republicans have screwed things up with what they did today.  I'm wondering how it could get any worse screwed up but then given it's the Government I'm sure it can be.

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