Senate nears passage of health bill
By ConnPolitics.tv Editor on Dec 23, 2009 | In News, Washington D.C. - Congress | 8 feedbacks »
By ERICA WERNER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) – Jubilant Democrats are ready to push President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul past one last 60-vote hurdle to final Christmas Eve passage, and Republicans concede they’re powerless to stop it.
“It looks obvious that that’s going to happen,” conceded Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, after Democrats triumphed on the second of three 60-vote procedural tallies over unanimous GOP opposition.
At the White House, press secretary Robert Gibbs declared, “Health care reform is not a matter of if, health care reform now is a matter of when.”
Obama himself said the Senate legislation accomplishes 95 percent of what he wanted. “Every single criteria for reform I put forward is in this bill,” the president told The Washington Post.
The third procedural vote comes Wednesday afternoon, when Democrats will have to put up 60 votes for the last time to cut off debate on the legislation. Democrats are also expected to turn back points of order raised against the bill by Republicans, including one questioning the constitutionality of requiring most every American to buy health insurance. Final passage on the sweeping bill, which will extend health coverage to 30 million uninsured Americans, is set for 8 a.m. Thursday, Christmas Eve.
That’s 11 hours earlier than originally scheduled, thanks to a deal struck Tuesday between Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. Republicans had been threatening to use all the time available to them, which would have kept the Senate in session late into the night before Christmas. But bad weather is forecast for later in the week, senators and aides are eager to get home to their families, and the outcome is preordained after Reid struck the final deals over the weekend to get his 58 Democrats and two independents in line.
Unable to prevent passage of the landmark legislation, Republicans are stepping up their criticism of it, focusing in on the special deals some senators got.
South Carolina Attorney General Henry McMaster, a candidate for governor, said he and his counterparts in Alabama, Colorado, Michigan, North Dakota, Texas and Washington state – all Republicans – are jointly taking a look at whether the special provisions for Nebraska and other states are constitutional. The federal government is picking up the full tab for an expansion of Medicaid in Nebraska, where conservative Sen. Ben Nelson provided Democrats their crucial 60th vote.
“These negotiations on their face appear to be a form of vote-buying paid for by taxpayers,” McMaster said.
Nelson vigorously defended the provision Tuesday, contending he didn’t seek any special carve-out for Nebraska and hoped all states would get the same help.
Republicans are just seeking “an opportunity to mislead and distort,” Nelson contended.
Differences between the House and Senate bills would still have to be worked out, including stricter abortion provisions and an income tax hike on high-earning Americans, both in the House bill. But the bills have much in common. Each costs around $1 trillion over 10 years and installs new requirements for nearly all Americans to buy insurance, providing subsidies to help lower-income people do so. They’re paid for by a combination of tax and fee increases and cuts in projected Medicare spending.
Unpopular insurance company practices such as denying coverage to people with pre-existing health conditions would be banned, and uninsured or self-employed Americans would shop for insurance in new marketplaces called exchanges.
8 comments
www.notintexas.com
"Dump Dodd"
Under Obamacare, Americans will be forced to buy government-approved health insurance and anyone earning a middle class wage will have to pay for it out of their own pocket. Federal subsidies will only be provided for people who are not offered coverage by their employer and earn below the 400 percent poverty level.
Employers will not be required to offer their workers coverage, being subject to a $750 annual penalty if they fail to do so, a figure most analysts say is not high enough to prevent employers from dropping their plans, meaning that more people will be forced to buy government health care.
“The Senate health care bill gives employers two powerful incentives to stop offering health insurance coverage to their workers,” writes Terry Jeffrey. “First, if an employer does offer coverage, its lower-wage workers will lose the federal insurance subsidy they would otherwise get. Secondly, if an employer does not offer coverage, the $750-per-worker fine it faces will be far less than the premiums it would pay if it did offer coverage.”
D0DD 202 224 2823
LIEB 202-224-4041
Ramming it through while no one is paying attention....????
Are you serious? How about all those swiftboat ads on TV ???
Since the Rebubics have no alternative package other than trying to stop Obama, I believe they should all be voted out of office. Lets get rid of the folks who brought us Bush, Palin and the attack on the wrong country. They drove us into the ground.
And now they are trying to derail the folks who are fixing the mess. I'd like to see your responses if you had no health care.
These folks you refer to are the Machiavellians - the Military Industrial Complex. The same group that killed Kennedy, MLK, RFK. The same group that created OsamaBinLaden and Al-Qeida, armed them to fight the Russians. The same group that created Blackwater, the same group that in May 2001 changed the intercept orders for planes that go off their flight plans, and the same group that sponsored military wargames on 9/11/2001 so the domestic military was not even certain what was going on. And one more thing - its the same group that threatened Martial Law so GoldmanSachs666 could be handed over hundreds of billions of dollars of tax payer money so that bonuses could be paid in a bad year for the banks.
Good luck !
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