Those estimates are slightly—but not significantly—better than the CBO’s projections for the House Republican version of the bill that passed in late May. The CBO estimated then that the House bill would lead 23 million more uninsured by 2026.
The effects of the BCRA would also have an immediate impact on those covered under the Affordable Care Act. The CBO’s report estimates that by next year, 15 million more would be uninsured. Those numbers would rise in 19 million more uninsured by 2020 as the ACA’s Medicaid expansion is rolled back. Though the bill would leave millions without health insurance, it would “reduce the cumulative federal deficit over the 2017-2026 period for $321 billion.”
According to several outlets, the CBO report might make the bill politically difficult for majority leader Mitch McConnell who needs fifty votes to pass the bill. Five Republicans have expressed doubt about voting for the bill in its current iteration, but it’s unclear whether or not they will vote against the BCRA or are simply maneuvering to have it amended. Surely, it must be very hard for all of those weighing unfettered cruelty against reelection.