This version of the story has been updated with details from the final vote.
Members of the House have paved the way for a showdown with the White House by voting 240-181 to pass H.R. 3762, a bill that would kill key sections of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) that affect Medicaid and the commercial health insurance market.
The bill would eliminate the PPACA individual and employer mandates, phase out funding for the PPACA public exchange subsidy programs, and eliminate PPACA Medicaid expansion funding. The bill also would de-fund Planned Parenthood and cut funding for a home care attendant services support program.
The bill would leave the PPACA ban on use of personal health information other than age, tobacco use and location in individual major medical underwriting in place.
In the qfloor debate, Republican supporters of the bill promoted it as a cure for the failures of PPACA, and PPACA interference in relationships between doctors.
Democratic critics called the bill an attack on people’s ability to keep their health insurance, and on women’s ability to get access to care for women.
See also: CBO: PPACA bill may lead to 55% rise in uninsured count
During a preliminary vote, on whether to bring the bill up for a final vote, all 237 of the Republicans who voted supported consideration of the bill, and all 177 Democrats who voted opposed consideration of the bill.
Three Republicans voted against the bill. They are Bob Dold of Illinois, Richard Hanna of Virginia, and John Katko of New York.
One Democrat, Collin Peterson of Minnesota, voted for the bill.