Two GOP senators say Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has dismissed their Obamacare replacement bill before he ever had a chance to read it.

Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana said on CNN Tuesday that Schumer's criticism of their plan to turn over healthcare policy to the states shows that the minority leader is making a partisan stand instead of trying to find a solution.

"He's trying to keep his party in line, he's trying to enforce partisanship," Cassidy said. "We're not about partisanship."

Collins and Cassidy introduced a bill with two other Republican senators that would allow states where Obamacare exchanges are working to keep their exchanges while allowing other states to come up with a plan to provide healthcare that works for them.

The bill keeps the central consumer protections of the Affordable Care Act in place, such as allowing children to stay on their parents' healthcare plans until they're 26, requiring insurance companies to provide healthcare to people with pre-existing conditions, and banning annual or lifetime caps on health insurance.

The law would also allow states to repeal the subsidies and Medicaid expansion in the current law, replacing them with tax-free health savings accounts.

Collins said Schumer might like the things in the bill if he actually read it.

"All of those consumer protections are in place, regardless of what plan you choose," she said.

Collins said the goal is to take power out of Washington and into state capitals.

"It's important to understand it isn't a matter of the states scrapping the Affordable Care Act," she said. "We do want to return power to the states to design their own health insurance plans because what may work in one state may not work in another state."

Cassidy added, "We shouldn't force a plan Mr. Schumer thinks is working in New York on Montana or Indiana or West Virginia."