Last evening, the House of Representatives moved to a vote on its version of healthcare reform. While most Americans were thinking of anything but law making in Washington, their representatives were attempting to reshape America’s health system under the watchful eye of Nancy Pelosi. The legislation that has been modified dramatically at each phase of its development passed the House with 220 votes. The final tally was 200 (yea) 215 (nea). There was one Republican who voted in favor of the bill – Rep. Anh “Joseph” Cao of Louisiana. He represents a Democrat-leaning district in Louisiana, but I think it is fair to say that the search for his replacement began yesterday. In addition to this idiot, 18 House Democrats that represent districts won by John McCain voted for this bill also. I would say that these seats will be up for grabs this time next year as well.
Here is what Rep. Cao got for selling his Republican soul and voting for this bill. (courtesy of MichelleMalkin.com)
Cao wrote he obtained commitment from President Obama that he would work together to address the health care issues of Louisiana, including the FMAP crisis and community disaster loan forgiveness, as well as issues related to Charity and Methodist Hospitals. “I call on all my constituents to support me as I work with him on these issues.”
In all, 39 Democrats turned away from the bill and their backs on Pelosi. A two-vote cushion is not a great victory, but it is a victory nonetheless; and the inclusion of one Republican gives her the liberty to run around calling this bipartisan now. I already have a headache from hearing her voice utter those words with her smug little tone.
Healthcare reform now lies in the hands of the Senate. With a public option in the bill being considered on the floor, it is unlikely that it will gain 60 votes to break filibuster. With a House bill narrowly passing, with only partisan support, the pressure many thought that it would add to Senate Republicans and Moderate Democrats will simply not be present. 220 votes is a narrow victory and certainly not enough to draw those on the fence to jump off and come down on the side of Pelosi. Reid may truly have to face the unfortunate reality that if he wants to push healthcare reform through the Senate, it may have to come through the nuclear option. I for one don’t think he has it in him to go that route, but we shall see.
The complex package would affect virtually every American and fundamentally alter vast swaths of the health insurance industry. Starting next year, private insurers could no longer deny anyone coverage based on preexisting conditions, place lifetime limits on coverage or abandon people when they become ill. Insurers would be required to disclose and justify proposed premium increases to regulators, and could not remove adult children younger than 27 from their parents’ family policies.
For the elderly, the group that has been most skeptical of Obama’s initiative, the House package would immediately offer discounts on prescription drugs and reduce a gap in Medicare prescription drug coverage, closing it entirely by 2019. Uninsured people who cannot get coverage could join temporary high-risk insurance pools, and unemployed workers would be permitted to keep their COBRA benefits until the public plan and insurance exchanges started in 2013.
In four years, the measure would establish a new insurance system. Businesses with payrolls exceeding $500,000 would be required to offer their workers insurance or pay a fine of as much as 8 percent of payroll. Individuals would be required to obtain insurance or pay a fine of as much as 2.5 percent of income. States would be required to extend Medicaid coverage to as many as 15 million additional people. Low- and middle-income individuals who still could not afford coverage could apply for federal subsidies through an insurance marketplace that would negotiate with private insurers to provide comprehensive policies alongside a government-run “public option.”
Congressional budget analysts say the package would cover an additional 36 million Americans, leaving 18 million people without insurance by 2019, about a third of them illegal immigrants. To avoid increasing the deficit, Democrats would pay for the coverage expansion by slicing more than $400 billion from Medicare over the next decade, and by imposing a variety of new taxes, primarily a 5.4 percent surcharge on annual income over $500,000 for individuals and $1 million for families. Initially, the tax would hit only 0.3 percent of taxpayers, but that number would climb rapidly, because the income thresholds would not be indexed to inflation.
Obstacles overcome
Introduced on July 14, the House package was approved in sections by three House committees. Since August, Pelosi has huddled behind closed doors with various factions of her diverse caucus to merge the three parts into comprehensive legislation.
The sticking points were clear from the start. Conservatives opposed the bill’s price tag and limited efforts to cut costs. Moderates, who face the toughest 2010 reelection battles, were wary of big-government overtones in the public option. Democrats from wealthy districts opposed the tax on high earners, which originally would have affected taxpayers with annual incomes as low as $280,000.
One after another, the obstacles were overcome — except for the simmering dispute over abortion. In early October, Rep. Bart Stupak, an antiabortion Democrat from Michigan, met with Pelosi to express the strong objections of about 40 Democrats to a provision in the legislation that appeared to allow federal funding of abortion. Stupak said they would oppose the bill unless the language was changed. Pelosi was noncommittal.
Late Friday, the Stupak coalition was still holding strong, and had gained a powerful ally in the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, whose leadership has close connections to Pelosi. Over the strong objections of Democrats who support abortion rights, the speaker relented to Stupak, awarding him the only Democratic amendment on the floor.
The Senate bill
Attention will now shift back to the Senate. If the Senate acts, negotiations to iron out differences between the two chambers could be wrenching. Among the toughest issues: whether the public option should include an “opt out” clause for states, as Reid has proposed; whether to require employers to provide coverage to their workers or take the less punitive approach preferred by Senate moderates; and whether to tax the rich or tax high-cost health-care policies, as the Senate proposed — a provision economists call the most important provisions in either bill for reining in costs.
In his lunchtime speech to House Democrats, Obama did not touch on any of those issues. But he acknowledged the anxiety felt by lawmakers who watched independent voters abandon Democratic candidates in Virginia and New Jersey in Tuesday’s elections, and he warned that voting down the most significant legislation of his young presidency would only complicate the party’s political future.
“If you think the Republicans are not going to go after you if you vote no,” the president said, according to several people present, “think again.”








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Americans need to wake up and realize that there liberty is being stolen from them without a fight. This is not a good thing people!! Even for those struggling with health problems medically and financially – they do not want this. Incremental reform is the only real solution. This is just burauacracy and nothing more.
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