The plan, revealed Wednesday, relies on individual tax credits to allow people to buy coverage from private insurers and includes other largely familiar GOP ideas such as medical liability reform and expanding access to health savings accounts.
It proposes putting $25 billion behind high-risk pools for people with pre-existing conditions and for others, and transforming the federal-state Medicaid program for the poor by turning it into state block grants or individual per-capita allotments to hold down spending.
But the 37-page white paper falls far short of a full-scale replacement proposal for Obamacare and leaves key questions unanswered, including the size of the tax credits, the overall price tag of the plan, and how many people would be covered.
Republican aides said it's intended as an overall road map showing how the GOP would approach undoing and replacing Obama's health law with a Republican in the White House, and specific legislative details would be answered as the actual bills are written next year.