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House Gets Its Act Together on Health Reform While Senate Dawdles

As I mentioned earlier today, the past week or so has given health reformers a severe case of whiplash. First, an early version of the Senate HELP committee bill was unveiled in an uncompleted form, after divisions between the committee's Republicans and Democrats on key issues like the public option, and the employer mandate couldn't be resolved in time for hearings. Unfortunately, that's the only legislation the Congressional Budget Office had to work with, and, perhaps unsurprisingly, they found it would cost about $1 trillion over 10 years while leaving, dozens of millions of people uninsured.

And this, remember, is the committee that's putting together a liberal bill, without worrying too much about rapprochement or bipartisan compromise. All of that bellyaching was going on in the Senate Finance Committee. The CBO determined that that bill would cost about $1.6 trillion over 10 years--significantly more than the conservative committee wanted to pay. And they've gone about making up the difference not by upping the ante on cost-cutting reform efforts, but by slashing the very benefits and subsidies reformers are fighting for--including the public option which has been scrapped, in the Finance bill, and replaced with a plan to create regional, non-profit co-operatives (more on that in a bit).

Hearings on that bill won't begin until next month, leaving Congress only days of session to complete the entire legislative process before their ambitious pre-August recess deadline.

But the story in the House is much different.

At her weekly press conference on Thursday, Speaker Nancy Pelosi held up her end of the bargain. "I'm saying we will have a public option in the House that will be real," she said. "If it's not real, it's no use doing. And if we don't do a public option, I'm not sure that we have as effective a public health care reform as we wish."

And compared to the disarray in the Senate, the House is pretty well poised to deliver. The three committees of jurisdiction there have agreed on a single piece of legislation, including a fairly robust public option, and, of course, the House GOP can't resort to a filibuster. Assuming it passes, the opponents of the provision will have to choke it off at several points along a lengthy political chain. They'll have to win out over the HELP committee to keep it out of the finalized Senate bill; then they'll have to get it stripped out of the final bill during conference; if they fail, they'd have to filibuster the conference report (something which rarely happens); and if they were to succeed in that regard, they'd have to fight the fight all over again, with less leverage, during the budget reconciliation process in October.

All of which is to say that despite all the sturm und drang last week, we're basically right back where we started--and the public is on the reformers' side.


11 Comments

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Welcome back Brian! Keep the health care reform stories coming! The general public needs to keep up on it. Please do some reporting on the money trail and follow the Senate on this.

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Krugman's got a great column out on this today

These damn prima donna Senators need to be read the Riot Act

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Californians visiting DC this summer can give DiFi a piece of their minds at one of her complimentary constituent breakfasts

http://feinstein.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=ServicesForCalifornians.ConstituentBreakfast

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FYI

The House EdLabor Blog

http://edlabor.house.gov/blog/

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There are too many Ben Nelson types in the Democratic Senate.

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Americans that care about Health Care should take a lesson in democracy from Iranians and go to 100 Main Street, Everycity, USA this July 4th and let our government know we want HEALTH CARE FOR ALL NOW.

WE are now the Silent Majority!

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Why doesn't Obama and Congress just take Jack Welch's advice and let people die. That would save us a ton of money.

It's amazing such callousness is coming from a man who is 150 years old. Jack Welch is a piece of work.

Here's the clip.

http://progressnotcongress.org/?p=1916

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I wish that TPM was doing a full court on Healthcare like it was on Social Security.

The Irancentric coverage over the last week or so is a bit much. It's not that I don't think it warrants coverage. But while we were getting side drained with Iran, Healthcare has been dying on the limb. This is one of the critical issues of our time. While there is a lot of good coverage out there by the DFH Liberal Blogs, we need everyone front and center to fight having this watered down into nothingness.

Each of the DFH Blogs has their own cha-ching in the fight. Having the weight of TPM in the fight brings to the table that "award winning journalist" cha-ching that at least some of the MSM have given credit to.

Come on, Josh & Co. This is some of your bread & butter, and longtimers and recall the SS wars. Time to kick it into gear before the war is lost (and this past week was very discouraging).

John

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I very much agree with tosh. Would love to see TPM go for something close to 'round the clock' coverage on healthcare, to make sure nothing 'sneaks' by us.

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I agree with this too. Chris Bowers has an e-mail challenge going to each and every D senator, but having TPM on the case would be very good too.

I hope Iran becomes a freer place, shoot, I helped an Iranian woman get asylum so I am well aware of how unfree it is -- but I also firmly believe that the Iranian story is not about us.

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I analyzed Division A of the House Bill on my blog. I'm working on Division B now, but that's a snooze-o-rama of Medicare technical jargon. The bill has several good things in it, but I still don't get this need to have these exchanges and all the subsidies so we can give insurance companies free internet infrastructure and help them keep premiums up. How about caps. Health care providers and insurers love caps when it prevents injured individuals from winning awards for their damages.

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