UPDATE: Republican leaders have abruptly pulled their troubled health care overhaul bill off the House floor, short of votes and eager to avoid a humiliating defeat for President Donald Trump and GOP leaders.
House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., withdrew the legislation after Trump called him and asked him to halt debate without a vote, according to Ryan spokeswoman AshLee Strong. Just a day earlier, Trump had demanded a House vote and said if the measure lost, he would move on to other issues.
PREVIOUS STORY: Republicans' long-promised effort to repeal and replace "Obamacare" was in serious trouble Friday ahead of a do-or-die vote demanded by President Donald Trump. Short of support, Speaker Paul Ryan met with Trump at the White House to discuss how to go forward.
The outcome was uncertain, the atmosphere charged. Trump had insisted that the vote take place on Friday after it was delayed the day before in an embarrassing setback. But the bill lost support rather than gained it as the day wore on.
Failure would be humiliating for the president, the self-proclaimed master deal-maker, and for Ryan on their first major legislative outing, and a huge setback for a Republican Party that has campaigned for seven years on promises to undo former President Barack Obama's landmark law. The path ahead on other priorities, such as overhauling the tax code, would grow dramatically more daunting.
Trump would be weakened politically, a big early congressional defeat adding to the continuing inquiries into his presidential campaign's Russia connections and his unfounded wiretapping allegations against Obama.
Congressman Rodney Frelinghuysen of New Jersey, chairman of a major committee, Appropriations, announced his opposition, saying the bill would raise costs unacceptably on his constituents. So did Rep. Barbara Comstock of Virginia, a key moderate Republican, and GOP Rep. David Joyce of Ohio.
GOP Rep. Mark Amodei of Nevada said he was hearing from health professionals in his home state that the bill would not help his state. He planned to vote "no," and remarked that there were numerous rank-and-file lawmakers like him, who normally vote with leadership, whose positions were unknown.
"Depending on how they break, it's like this might not even be close," Amodei said. "I'm not predicting anything but that's how I'm looking at it," he said, brushing off the possibility that Trump, who won his district, might campaign against him or seek political retribution.
"I'm taking my refuge in the impacts on my district in Nevada," Amodei said.
The GOP bill would eliminate the Obama statute's unpopular fines on people who do not obtain coverage and would also remove the often-generous subsidies for those who purchase insurance.
Republican tax credits would be based on age, not income like Obama's, and the tax boosts Obama imposed on higher-earning people and health care companies would be repealed. The bill would end Obama's Medicaid expansion and trim future federal financing for the federal-state program, letting states impose work requirements on some of the 70 million beneficiaries.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said the Republican bill would result in 24 million additional uninsured people in a decade and lead to higher out-of-pocket medical costs for many lower-income and people just shy of age 65 when they would become eligible for Medicare. The bill would block federal payments for a year to Planned Parenthood.
Democrats were uniformly opposed. "This bill is pure greed, and real people will suffer and die from it," said Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington state.
Rep. Mark Walker, head of the conservative Republican Study Committee, was a supporter of the legislation who like others in his camp was frustrated with the holdouts.
"These guys have to come to terms that this is our moment to repeal and replace Obamacare. Seven years we've promised it and today is showtime," Walker said. "We have not discussed a plan B."
But Rep. Mark Meadows of North Carolina, leader of a key bloc of conservatives, the House Freedom Caucus, was tight-lipped as the day wore on. Numerous GOP leaders said much was riding on the Freedom Caucus and its two or three dozen votes after the group extracted concessions to now eliminate requirements from Obama's law to cover certain "essential health benefits" including maternity care and substance abuse programs.
Friday's fast-paced developments came after Trump and administration officials delivered an ultimatum to House Republicans late Thursday, telling them to vote Friday and then move on, regardless of the outcome. If the vote failed, Obamacare would stay in place, they said.
"We'll see what happens," Trump said Friday when asked his course should the measure fail.
Despite reports of backbiting by administration officials aimed at Ryan, White House press secretary Sean Spicer said that the "speaker has done everything he can. You can't force people to vote."
"There's no question we have left everything on the field," Spicer said.
Trump targeted the Freedom Caucus in an early-morning tweet.
"The irony is that the Freedom Caucus, which is very pro-life and against Planned Parenthood, allows P.P. to continue if they stop this plan!" Trump wrote.
Republicans could lose only 22 votes in the face of united Democratic opposition. A tally by The Associated Press found at least 34 "no" votes, but the figure was fluctuating amid frantic GOP lobbying.
For one opponent, Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., Trump's declaration that Friday was the GOP's last shot at repealing Obama's statute seemed to inspire only defiance.
"We're the legislative body last I looked, not the president," Gosar said.
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