Repealing portions of Obamacare would lead to 32 million more people becoming uninsured by 2026, and a doubling in the prices of premiums paid by those people who remain covered by individual health plans by that year, a new analysis says.

The Congressional Budget Office report projects that "the number of people who are uninsured would increase by 18 million in the first new plan year following enactment" of an Obamacare repeal bill along the lines of one that had been introduced in the House in 2015. The report projects millions more people would leave the individual insurance market after that as prices skyrocket. Eventually, about three-quarters of the U.S. population would not even have access to an insurer selling such individual plans if the House bill were to be adopted, according to the nonpartisan CBO.

That bill was sponsored by Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga., who has been nominated as secretary of the U.S. Health and Human Services by President-elect Donald Trump. The president-elect has said he wants the Republican-led Congress to repeal and replace Obamacare in one fell swoop with a plan that he claims will be introduced almost simultaneously with Price's confirmation. It is not clear if Trump's plan will mirror Price's previously sponsored plan. In an interview with The Washington Post over the weekend, Trump said of his plan, "We're going to have insurance for everybody." "Much less expensive and much better," Trump said. The CBO's analysis also does not consider the effect of any potential laws that could maintain coverage for some or all of those people currently insured as a result of the Affordable Care Act. The bulk of those 20 million people are either insured by individual health plans — as opposed to job-based, "group" insurance — or through Medicaid in states that expanded eligibility with federal funding to more poor adults. Price's bill would have eliminated Obamacare's tax penalty for people who fail to have health coverage of some kind. His bill also would have ended the federal subsidies that millions of people get to lower the cost of purchasing individual health plans on Obamacare marketplaces, as well as funding for expanded Medicaid benefits. But Price's bill, which was vetoed by President Barack Obama, would have maintained Obamacare reforms including requiring insurers to provide coverage to people regardless of their health status and requiring insurers to have specific benefits and basic levels of coverage.