Democrats Say They Are Close to Passing Health Care Reform
Thursday, March 11, 2010 at 9:57AM
Could it be true? Really? Can we dare hope that this issue will be finally decided?
One year after (100 years, actually, if you're counting from the time Teddy Roosevelt launched his campaign for national health insurance) negotiations started on comprehensive health care reform - we're still talking about it.
But something has changed in the last few weeks.
President Barack Obama has energized his Party mostly through fear - if you don't pass health care reform you'll go down in flames in November's mid-term elections, he has essentially told them.
Obama has also campaigned across the country, finding his 2008 fiery voice once again and rallying support among grass roots Democrats who had been demoralized by the last few months of looming failure.
And it seems to be working - there is a very real chance that this bill will finally pass without a single Republican vote.
Critical to this change in fortune for the health care reform proclaimed dead some time ago, has been the insurance companies themselves, historic and implacable foes of reform.
In an act of hubris or shear stupidity, some insurance companies, like giant insurer Anthem, significantly raised rates on policies a few weeks ago - thereby demonstrating the ongoing risk to national solvency of runaway health care costs and an insurance industry unable to ever act for the common good or even their true self-interest (lesson here: if you're about to torpedo health care reform again, don't flaunt it by raising rates).
Also important, the White House changed the framing of the issue.
Where as the raison d'être of reform had been to cover the uninsured - making anybody with even bad insurance fear change and the unknown - they are now selling the benefits of the reform to the majority of the electorate who already has insurance but is reasonably anxious about the future should they change jobs, get seriously ill or simply if their employer drops coverage because of un-affordable costs.
The change in frame, the insurance companies collective hara-kiri, plus a realpolitik approach from the White House have transformed what could (still be if it does not pass) failure into potential victory.
The next few days and weeks will be decisive both for health care and the fate of the Democrats and the President's ability to implement the rest of his agenda.
Here's the President at one his rallies:
From the White House transcript of the President's speech:
There’s no government takeover, unless you consider reining in insurance companies a government takeover -- and I think that’s the right thing to do. There’s no cutting of Medicare benefits. There’s just cutting out fraud and waste in Medicare to make it stronger. What we’re proposing is a common-sense approach to protecting you from insurance company abuses and saving you money. That’s the proposal, and it is paid for. And I believe that Congress owes the American people a final up or down vote on health care reform. The time for talk is over; it’s time to vote.
ABC News reports on the Democrats' determination to pass the bill:
House Democratic leaders on Thursday worked to rally their rank-and-file members around last-minute agreements on insurance taxes and prescription drug coverage that could move President Barack Obama's overhaul of the nation's health care system a step closer to reality.Although some issues remained unresolved — including a divisive battle over restricting taxpayer funding of abortion — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said: "We have enough to move forward."
She asked Democrats at a two-hour, closed-door briefing whether they wanted to vote sooner rather than later on the legislation. They responded with a broad shout of "Yes!" according to lawmakers coming out of the session.
White House officials and congressional Democratic leaders met Wednesday evening in Pelosi's office. Aides said they agreed on scaling back a health insurance tax that unions object to, and on gradually closing the Medicare prescription drug coverage gap. They were not far apart on other major issues, including Medicaid funding for states that already provide above-average benefits, and on improving subsidies that would be available under the plan to help individuals and families pay their premiums.
Nancy Pelosi said last night on Charlie Rose that she has the votes to pass the bill:



