CNN's Jake Tapper: “It certainly sounds like the guarantees on pre-existing conditions” in Graham-Cassidy bill “are not actually guarantees”

From the September 20 edition of CNN's The Lead with Jake Tapper:

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JAKE TAPPER (HOST): Comedian Jimmy Kimmel calling out Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana last night for his new Obamacare repeal and replacement bill, which Kimmel says would break a promise made by the Louisiana lawmaker that all pre-existing conditions would be covered, and there wouldn't be any discrimination against anybody with a pre-existing [condition], including his son Billy, who has a serious heart ailment and continues to battle it. Cassidy repeatedly referred to these parameters as “The Jimmy Kimmel test.”



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TAPPER: Who is right here, Jimmy Kimmel or Sen. Cassidy, in terms of the description of the bill? For instance, would this bill, would the Cassidy-Graham bill allow insurance companies in some cases to discriminate against those who have pre-existing conditions?



PHIL MATTINGLY: Yes, so let's take them piece by piece, and these are two very bold, wide-ranging statements by two individuals on an issue that is both nuanced and very complex. Let's take the pre-existing conditions issue. Now, not unlike Obamacare, Graham-Cassidy contains the ban on insurers being able to deny anybody coverage for pre-existing conditions. So that stays, that's accurate.



But go deeper into the bill, and this is what Jimmy Kimmel was referring to specifically. States would have the opportunity to gain a waiver to get out of specific regulations. One of those regulations: the price protections for individuals with pre-existing conditions.



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TAPPER: It certainly sounds like the guarantees on pre-existing conditions and lifetime caps are not actually guarantees.

Previously:



“Free Democrat ad”: Right-wing media assail Jimmy Kimmel for criticizing Bill Cassidy’s lies about Obamacare repeal

Seven reasons media shouldn't fall for the latest health care “compromise”



Sinclair “must run” segment lets Trump official mislead about health care coverage