Policy · 115th Congress
Congressional Audit Reports That Nuclear Bomb Budget Falls Short
Developing and producing up to 500 B61-12 bombs will cost $10 billion through fiscal 2026, according to the new estimate.
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Developing and producing up to 500 B61-12 bombs will cost $10 billion through fiscal 2026, according to the new estimate.
Many moderates balked at an early analysis that showed the Republican proposal would leave more than 24 million more people without insurance coverage in 2026, compared to expected insurance rates under
Overall, the package would reduce federal deficits by $150 billion by 2026, roughly $186 billion less than the original language.
The Democrats point to a Congressional Budget Office report that showed 24 million more people would lose health care coverage by 2026 if the bill becomes law.
When the CBO finally scored it, they warned that 24 million fewer Americans would be insured by 2026 than under Obamacare, a number even worse that Price's own repeal bill that passed in 2015.
But senators trudged through the slush and snow to the Capitol, where they faced questions about the CBO report that said the GOP plan would lead to 24 million more people uninsured by 2026, and reduce
leadership's legislation to partially repeal and replace the 2010 health care law would reduce the deficit by $337 billion over a decade while increasing the number of uninsured by 24 million people by 2026
dismantle the 2010 health care overhaul would increase the number of uninsured individuals by 32 million people and nearly double the premium costs for individual insurance plans in the law’s marketplace by 2026
From fiscal 2017 to 2026, it will cost $341.78 billion, including inflation, to buy and sustain new nuclear submarines, aircraft, missiles, bombs, warheads and associated computers, according to