Healthcare Endgame Approaching
Quickly
Part One of Three
The following is from the
excellent blog,
http://powellcenterformedicalethics.blogspot.com
Part Two discusses
China's appalling attitude and
behavior toward female babies.
Part Three updates you
on charges being brought against
euthanasia activists. Please
send your thought on any or all
parts to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
Follow me on
http://twitter.com/daveha.
Democratic leaders are meeting
and strategizing around the
clock as Congress tries to pass
the stalled healthcare bill
either before President Obama
leaves for an oversees trip on
the 18th, or before the Easter
recess beginning on March 26. At
the same time Democrats seek a
way forward, Virginia is posed
to became the first state to ban
mandated coverage (pending the
signature of Gov. Bob
McDonnell), should such a
requirement be a part of a new
federal health care bill.
 |
|
Senator Kent Conrad
(D-ND) |
"Thirty-four other state
legislatures have either filed
or proposed similar measures --
statutes or constitutional
amendments -- rejecting health
insurance mandates, according to
the American Legislative
Exchange Council," the
Associated Press has reported.
The Congressional Democratic
leadership is facing two
separate hurdles. The first is
gaining, or keeping, enough
votes to ensure passage among an
increasingly large number of
squeamish Democrats. The other
is the process itself: the use
of "reconciliation."
Reconciliation, which is a way
around a Republican filibuster
in the Senate, is widely
believed to be the only way
forward on the current bill. The
rules seem to indicate that the
House will have to first pass
the Senate bill (the bill passed
last December), and then a
separate reconciliation bill
containing changes--or
"fixes"--can be considered.
However, a ruling is anticipated
from the Senate Parliamentarian
in which he determines whether
the reconciliation process can
be used in this case. This may
mean that Obama might have to
sign the legislation into law
before the Senate can even
consider the House "fixes." This
is said to be creating distrust
among House Democrats of their
Senate counterparts.
Complicating matters is whether
at this point the Congressional
Budget Office (CBO), a key
non-partisan figure, can even
score (give cost estimates) of
"fixes" that haven't been passed
yet. Senator Kent Conrad (D-ND)
has said, "For the scoring to
change it has to have passed
Congress, and that means
[passing] both houses." Despite
this, there are reports that a
CBO score might be out this week
on the reconciliation portion.
With the matter far from
settled, and another
self-imposed deadline looming,
time and options are running
short. All the while, serious
rationing concerns described in
earlier posts still remain.
Part Two
Part Three |