Dems push toward health care vote Sun.
By ConnPolitics.tv Editor on Mar 19, 2010 | In News, Washington D.C. - Congress, President Barack Obama | 22 feedbacks »
By ERICA WERNER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) – Slowly but steadily, support is building behind President Barack Obama’s health care legislation in the House, the result of intense lobbying and politically targeted changes aimed at reassuring waverers and winning over critics.
Obama himself was to talk up the sweeping overhaul in a midday speech Friday in Virginia, his fourth outside-the-Beltway event in two weeks as he scrambles to rally the public ahead of a climactic vote this weekend. On Capitol Hill, congressional leaders were focusing on those rank-and-file Democrats, including moderates and opponents of abortion, who remained undecided after the release Thursday of a final package of changes to the massive 10-year, $940 billion legislation.
“Every vote around here is a heavy lift,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said. “We don’t have a rubber-stamp Congress or a rubber-stamp (Democratic) caucus. So, we have our full airing of issues.”
The White House and Democratic leaders trumpeted two new converts to their cause, as retiring Rep. Bart Gordon, D-Tenn., and first-term Rep. Betsy Markey, D-Colo., announced their support after opposing an earlier version of the legislation last year. Markey cited improved deficit cuts. Gordon said his backing was unrelated to a new provision sending higher Medicaid payments to Tennessee hospitals that treat large numbers of uninsured.
As rumors flew around the House chamber of more possible opponents-turned-supporters – and also of previous “yes” voters who might withdraw their support – Pelosi worked her members, seeking out lawmakers individually or in small groups on the House floor to try to win them over. With Republicans unanimously opposed after a year of corrosive debate, the vote set for Sunday was expected to be a cliffhanger, and Democratic leaders don’t yet command the 216 commitments they need.
Obama postponed until June a planned Asia trip that was set to begin Sunday, allowing him to stay in town for the House vote and action next week in the Senate. Thursday afternoon, Obama played host to individual lawmakers seeking favors or reassurance. House Democrats were hoping to get a letter of support Friday signed by enough Senate Democrats to guarantee passage of the package of changes in that chamber, something leaders hope will reassure rank-and-file House members that they won’t be left hanging out to dry.
But a climate of uncertainty remained the dominant dynamic as the climactic vote drew near. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer acknowledged Friday that the leadership still lacks enough votes to win this weekend’s climactic vote.
The Maryland Democrat said on CBS’s “The Early Show” he believes House members “are going to conclude by Sunday that this is a bill that does what we said it was going to do.”
And Rep. Bart Stupak, a Michigan Democrat who has led a dozen House Democrats in opposing the bill because of the abortion issue, reiterated Friday that his group may vote no when the final vote comes.
“My group of 12 here can make the difference on this vote,” he said on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”
Stupak said “there’s a principle we’re standing up for. … Protect the sanctity of life. Keep current law. No public funding for abortion. Let’s keep that principle intact and you can probably get our vote.”
With the addition of the 153 pages of revisions, the bill would expand health care to 32 million uninsured, bar the insurance industry from denying coverage on the basis of pre-existing medical conditions and trim federal deficits by an estimated $138 billion over the next decade.
Beginning in 2014, most Americans would be required for the first time to purchase insurance or face penalties if they refused. Large businesses would face fines if they did not offer good-quality coverage to their workers. Millions of families with incomes up to $88,000 a year would receive government help to defray their costs.
To address concerns of House Democrats, those subsidies were raised by an estimated $25 billion over a decade in the package of changes offered Thursday. Seniors who experience a gap in coverage in the Medicare prescription drug program would receive a $250 rebate this year – an election-year bragging point for Democrats as they look toward the fall campaign with control of Congress at stake. A special deal giving extra Medicaid money to Nebraska was struck in exchange for more Medicaid money for all states, though other special deals decried by Obama stayed in the bill.
The changes also included another of Obama’s top priorities: Federally guaranteed student loans would now be made only by the government, ending a role for banks and other for-profit lenders who charge fees. The savings, an estimated $60 billion over a decade, would increase Pell grants for needy college students as well as support for programs such as aid to historically black colleges, a priority of the Congressional Black Caucus.
The package of changes would modify the sweeping health care legislation that cleared the Senate late last year. In a strategy designed to skirt Republicans’ new ability to filibuster in the Senate, House Democrats on Sunday will move to pass both the Senate measure and the package of changes to it; the bill making changes could pass the Senate under rules allowing for a simple majority, not 60 votes.
In the Senate, Republicans plan to challenge select provisions by claiming they are not eligible to be included in a measure considered under non-filibuster rules.
——
Associated Press writers David Espo, Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, Charles Babington, Alan Fram, Laurie Kellman and Ann Sanner contributed to this report.
22 comments
It is simply un-American and any person who votes for this should be shown the door.....
Thomas Jefferson, Rights of British America, 1774
Thomas Jefferson, letter to Lafayette, 1823
Thomas Jefferson, First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1801
Courtney 860 886-0139
DeLauro 203 562-3718
Larson 860 278-8888
Murphy 860 223-8412
Himes 866 453-0028
If the line is busy, keep trying. Make sure they know how you feel BEFORE the vote!
"Dump Himes"
"Dump Himes"
I will be suprised if there is 1 democrat left in office if this passes.
Second, I guess we will see which party fairs better. I know everyone I know is just thrilled with the Republican party for all they've done for the average person in the last ten years, and;
Third, "Conservative" do you drive a car without insurance??
"Senate Democrats closed ranks Thursday behind $460 billion in politically risky Medicare cuts at the heart of health care legislation"
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34258944/
What a mess! This could go on for a long time to come if it passes.
Then when the people realize what the bill really does... OMG!
Lets hope it does not pass.
THE HEALTHCARE BILL IS MORE ABOUT MONEY AN CONTROL OF PEOPLE…
NEXT IS: SINGLE PAYER SYSTEM, CAP AN TRADE, UNION CARD CHECK,
Guaranteed to Oppress People.
Every lunatic who has posted on this topic with the hysteria being shown should be ashamed of themselves. If you are so sure that whoever votes for this bill will be thrown out of office why are you coming out so strongly in opposition? I would think that you would keep your mouth shut and let them vote if you are so sure of their eventual demise.
The GOP is no longer the party of Lincoln but a new "extremist" group bent of spewing its diatribe of racism and discrimination.
You should change your name to "Don't Know What I'm Talking About". Your a typical hateful liberal.
I agree with the republicans this time but both parties need to be replaced. Check out the WTNH poll - 70% against the bill.
This bill is bad! This is just like the "Credit Card Reform Bill". We got screwed with that one and if this passes it will do the same.
Leave a comment
| « Ohio Rep switches to yes on health care | Republican candidates for Gov. debate » |