President Donald Trump spent the weekend attacking Senate Republicans for not passing Obamacare repeal, a replacement bill, or even the "skinny bill." | Evan Vucci/AP White House not letting go of Obamacare repeal

The White House is trying to rebuild momentum for Obamacare repeal after it stalled, yet again, in the GOP Senate last week.

Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) met Monday with top aides to President Donald Trump and Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price about health care reform, said a Cassidy aide and Republican officials.


Sources said several GOP governors were expected to attend including Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, Phil Bryant of Mississippi and Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas. Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey is also expected to be in D.C. Monday. Seema Verma, the top Medicaid official, and White House legislative director Marc Short were also expected.

"I was called to a working session at the White House with a small group of governors to discuss options with the Administration to improve our healthcare system and to reduce long-term costs for our state and nationally," Hutchinson said. "I am encouraged that there is a new commitment to finding a solution that is inclusive of the governors.”

Cassidy said everyone in attendance was seeking a "path forward" on healthcare, which has eluded the GOP for months. The meeting comes after Cassidy and Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Dean Heller of Nevada spoke with the president on Friday to discuss their health care proposal.

The Cassidy-Graham proposal hasn't been scored by the Congressional Budget Office, which would be required if it were to receive a vote under the fast-track budget "reconciliation" procedure. It was first unveiled late last week as an amendment to the Senate GOP's repeal effort, although it never received a vote. The plan would keep intact most of Obamacare's taxes except the medical device tax, send federal health care funds to the states in block grants, kill Obamacare's individual mandate and maintain protections for people with pre-existing conditions.

Trump pressured aides over the weekend to show progress, and the Graham-Cassidy proposal is seen as one possible way forward. Administration officials have sought to bring together Graham and Cassidy, along with conservative Sen. Mike Lee of Utah and House Freedom Caucus Chairman Mark Meadows of North Carolina, to agree on a proposal. For now, the effort is mostly supported by mostly rank-and-file GOP lawmakers.

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Trump spent the weekend attacking Senate Republicans for not passing Obamacare repeal, a replacement bill, or even the "skinny bill" that focused on Obamacare's coverage mandates. On Monday morning, he threatened again to halt payments of Obamacare subsidies and to reduce congressional health benefits.

"If ObamaCare is hurting people, & it is, why shouldn't it hurt the insurance companies & why should Congress not be paying what public pays?" Trump tweeted.

Rachana Pradhan contributed to this report.