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Hawaii joins effort to fight Trump’s health care reform

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jim Mangia, CEO of St. John’s Well Child and Family Center, right watches as California Attorney General Xavier Becerra talks during a news conference at St. John’s Well Child and Family Center.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Hawaii Attorney General Doug Chin walks outside a federal courthouse in Seattle Monday. Chin is among more than a dozen Democratic attorneys general who aim to intervene in a federal lawsuit that threatens to undercut funding for the Affordable Care Act.

Democratic attorneys general in more than a dozen states, including Hawaii, announced Thursday they would attempt to intervene in a federal lawsuit that threatens to undercut funding for the Affordable Care Act.

The legal move is intended to give the states a foothold in the case that could disrupt the lives of millions of Americans.

The lawsuit, House v. Price, was filed by House Republicans against the Obama administration and challenged the constitutionality of aid payments estimated at $7 billion this year. The insurance subsidies help cover medical expenses for lower-income Americans.

At issue is how the Trump administration will handle the lawsuit.

Speaking in Los Angeles, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said there is no way to predict the direction of the Trump White House in the matter. “That unpredictability by itself, that instability in the health care marketplace, is what raises costs,” he said.

Hawaii Attorney General Doug Chin said in a statement, “Recent congressional efforts to repeal Obamacare would result in stripping healthcare from more than 20 million people, eliminating protections for pre-existing conditions, and increasing costs for the poorest Americans, including those who live in Hawaii. The House v. Price lawsuit is the judicial equivalent of these congressional efforts and that is why I oppose it.”

Since President Donald Trump took office in January, Democratic attorneys general have repeatedly contested his administration’s proposals, including on softening environmental protections.

The California Medical Association said in a statement that the health care subsidies are “crucial to ensure that low-income families can afford the cost of coverage, doctors’ visits and life-saving medical treatment.”

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office recently concluded earlier this year that insurance markets would probably be stable in most areas under the Obama-era Affordable Care Act. But Trump has predicted it “soon will explode.”

Parties in the case are expected to meet next week.

In an earlier ruling, a U.S. district judge in Washington found the law does not explicitly authorize those expenditures.

The case has been on hold by mutual agreement of the House and the Trump administration. Insurers, which are legally obligated to provide assistance to qualifying customers, continue to be reimbursed by the government.

Along with California and Hawaii, states involved in the legal action are New York, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, Vermont and Washington state.

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