The Senate failed Tuesday night to advance Republicans’ long-gestating plan to repeal and replace Obamacare, an important step in the chamber’s ongoing health care floor debate that looks increasingly likely to result in a much more modest health care plan.

The Senate voted late Tuesday to take up a new version of a repeal-and-replace plan that senators have been working on for months (the Better Care Reconciliation Act, or BCRA). It would have scaled back the law’s tax subsidies, repealed Medicaid expansion, and overhauled the entire Medicaid program with a federal spending cap.

This revised iteration of the BCRA — which included an amendment by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) to allow non-Obamacare plans back on the market paired with $100 billion in funding to partially offset the Medicaid cuts — was subject, because of the Senate budget rules, to a 60-vote threshold for a procedural vote. It failed handily, 43 to 57, with nine Republicans and all Democrats opposing it.

Next up: a vote on clean repeal of Obamacare’s spending and health insurance coverage expansion with no replacement, which is scheduled for midday Wednesday. That bill is also expected to fail.

Neither result would be a surprise. Health care lobbyists and Senate aides believe the most likely destination is a skinny Obamacare repeal bill that undoes the individual mandate, the employer mandate, and a few of the law’s taxes. The text of that legislation has not yet been released or scored by the Congressional Budget Office.

The Senate health care debate is still ongoing, though

Debate will continue on the House health care bill on Wednesday, which is technically the bill that Republican senators voted on.

Here’s what is still to come.