Obamacare: US senators vote in favour of debating repeal

The US Senate has voted to start debating a new Republican healthcare bill in a major step forward for President Donald Trump's attempts to repeal his predecessor's signature law.

In a tight vote, several Republicans previously opposed to aspects of the plan changed their minds.

Prior attempts to replace Obamacare have collapsed in recent weeks due to divisions in the Republican party.

President Trump had made scrapping the policy a key campaign pledge.

Before the vote took place, Mr Trump had warned his party's senators of the repercussions of not pushing through the measures to repeal and replace Obamacare, known formally as the Affordable Care Act.

The Republican party, which needed a majority for the motion to go ahead, secured 51 votes after Vice-President Mike Pence cast a tie-breaker in support of the legislation.

Senator John McCain, who was recently diagnosed with an aggressive brain tumour, received a standing ovation as he returned to Congress to cast his "Yes" vote.

President Trump tweeted his thanks to the Arizona senator for playing "such a vital role" in the vote.

"Congrats to all Rep. We can now deliver grt [great] healthcare to all Americans," he wrote.

What happens next?

It remains unclear what measure senators will now debate and vote on.

There appear to be two choices - either a repeal-and-replace bill that has already struggled to win support across the party, or a bill that enacts repeal with a two-year delay, in the hope of finding agreement before that time elapses.

But senators have also considered a "skinny bill", a far narrower measure that would scale back some of the more controversial elements in an effort to get a wider consensus.

 

Photo: John McCain entered the Senate to cast the deciding vote