For those of us who questioned how hard the White House and its congressional allies would fight for health care reform, the answer is here. The devil remains in the details, of course, but in the last couple of days Barack Obama has put Republicans and conservative Democrats alike "on notice": Get on board or get left behind.
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This weekโs big news is that Sen. Ted Kennedyโs Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee passed its version of a reform billโincluding the presidentโs public planโon a party line vote. They shrugged and accepted several GOP amendments (I havenโt yet read anything that considers the amendments consequential) and called it a bipartisan effort.
Kennedyโs HELP has been the counterpoint to Sen. Max Baucusโ stalled Finance Committee, where Baucus has thus far failed to convince Republicans and moderate Dems to support some form of a public option to compete against existing private plans. The HELP bill now stands as a tangible threatโif Baucus doesnโt move something soon, this becomes the primary Senate bill.
The bill requires every American be coveredโthrough an employer, through Medicaid/Medicare or by purchasing as an individual. It then provides subsidies to make buying insurance affordable and introduces a public plan as one option inside a regulated marketplace, whatโs been called a health insurance exchange. Subsidies go to families making less than four times the poverty levelโabout $88,000 for a family of fourโaccording to AP. Adds the WASHINGTON POST:
Under the legislation, most businesses would be required to offer insurance to workers or pay a $750 annual fee per full-time employee. Companies with fewer than 25 employees would be exempt from the mandate.
Politically, just as important as the HELP bill is a DNC ad campaign launched today. According to CNN, the 30-second spot will urge viewers in eight states with key senators in both parties to call Capitol Hill. The ad doesnโt name names, but the message is pretty damn clear. (The eight states are Arkansas, Indiana, Florida, Louisiana, Maine, North Dakota, Nebraska and Ohio.) Moreover, both David Axelrod and Rahm Emanuel have said plainly in the last couple of days that the White House is perfectly content with a party line vote. Hereโs the TV ad:
Meanwhile, three House committees released a bill yesterday that theyโve drafted in concert. As Ezra Klein points out, this is huge news politically for a couple of reasons. First, the confusing cacophony of proposals that came out of various committees during the 1994 reform effort helped doom it; no such dissention on the House side this time. Second, the committeesโ unity greatly strengthens the Houseโs negotiating hand when it comes time to reconcile its bill with whatever the Senate passes, which will almost certainly be less ambitious.
Already, the House bill appears to take a bigger swing than even the Senate HELP version. Kleinโs your best journalistic source for the House billโs policy weeds (he hadnโt yet posted on the Senate billโs details at this writing, but look for it). But Igor Volsky in Think Progressโ WONK ROOM also makes an important point.ย He notes that the House version is less shy about using Medicareโs negotiating advantage with providers than the Senate HELP bill, and itโs thus more likely to truly bring down costs.
โKAI WRIGHT
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