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Posts Tagged ‘senate finance committee’

A public row

Democrats are trying to revive the idea of a government-run health plan

“IT’S not really a public option, it’s a consumer option.” So declared Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the House of Representatives, this week. Her effort to rebrand the hugely controversial proposal to add a government-run insurer (usually called a “public plan”) to the health reforms now being negotiated seems ridiculous at first blush. In fact, it is part of a concerted and clever push by the political left that could—just possibly—revive an idea that had seemed dead and buried.

When Mrs Pelosi revealed, on October 29th, the House’s version of a health-reform bill, there were no real suprises; as expected, a public plan featured prominently. The real suprise had come three days earlier. Until very recently, it had looked as though the proposal to tack on a public plan was, despite fervent support among the left, politically doomed. First came Barack Obama’s slippery but clear efforts to back away from it. Then came a crucial vote of the Senate Finance Committee, which rejected the public plan. The final congressional health bill must reconcile the versions coming out of the full House and Senate, and the powerful Finance Committee’s rejection had appeared to be a final nail in the coffin. …

Don’t ask how much

The Senate Finance Committee passes a health-reform bill, at long last

“WHEN history calls, history calls.” Those were the words uttered by Olympia Snowe just before she cast her vote in favour of a long-awaited health bill in the Senate’s Finance Committee on Tuesday October 13th. Ms Snowe apart, the committee voted strictly on party lines: 13 Democrats in favour and nine Republicans against. It was a closer-run battle than that tally suggests, as several Democrats wavered until the last moment, angry that the proposal does not contain a provision for a government-run insurer, or “public plan”.

In the end they voted for the proposal because it would advance, in imperfect fashion, several liberal goals. Over the coming decade it is supposed to increase the proportion of Americans with health insurance from 85% or so (over 46m now lack cover) to perhaps 94%. And it would forbid insurers from dropping sick customers for having “pre-existing conditions” or costly illnesses that blow through caps on lifetime costs. …

Key Senate panel gears up for US health care vote

A key US congressional panel was set to cast judgment on health care reform on Tuesday, in a rare moment of drama in President Barack Obama’s long slog to pass his top domestic priority. The Senate Finance Committee will vote on an 829-billion-dollar, 10-year effort to cut costs and provide

The Progress Report: Sorting Myth From Reality

by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ian Millhiser and Nate Carlile To receive The Progress Report in your email inbox everyday,…

Bill Scher: How To Contact Congress and Save Health Care In Two Easy Steps

It looks like the small 6-member subgroup of the Senate Finance Committee is close to an agreement on health insurance legislation. It looks like it…

John Geyman: The Public Option: Dead By Pen Strokes In Congressional Committees

The initial idea of a public option was premised on the thought that a public plan could bring needed competition into the financing of health care. Forget that dream.

DeMint: Obama Is “Out Of Control”

Senator Jim DeMint, R-S.C., who has taken a particular glee in pushing the argument that health care could be Obama’s unraveling, did little to calm the rhetoric between him and the White House on Sunday.

Appearing on “This Week,” the South …

Tax On ‘Gold-Plated’ Health Care Plans Gains Ground

White House officials are embracing a plan to tax “gold-plated, Cadillac” insurance policies, giving momentum to an idea that is receiving bipartisan consideration on Capitol Hill.

“A premium charge on top of the most expensive packages is on…

Tomasky Talk on Obama’s healthcare reform

Tomasky talk: How the US Senate finance committee and its chairman, Max Baucus, factor into healthcare reform


Pelosi: I’m Not Bound By Deals White House Cut With Health Care Industry

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday that she doesn’t feel bound by the $235 billion in deals that the White House and the Senate Finance Committee cut with hospital and pharmaceutical companies to defray costs of a new health-care plan, s…

Mike Elk: The Fat Cats of Wall Street Want to Tax Your Health Care Benefits

When I heard Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT), floating the idea of a tax on health benefits in order to raise revenue for health care reform, I was baffled; how could this be?

The Media Consortium: Weekly Pulse: The Rocky Road to Reform

by Lindsay Beyerstein, TMC MediaWire Blogger Healthcare is dominating domestic politics this week, as Congress and President Obama outline their visions for reform. The president…

Obama Calls Into Health Care Negotiations

The phone rang toward the end of Max Baucus’ meeting Tuesday night: It was President Obama.

Obama has been pushing for a health care bill before Congress takes off next month, and Sen. Baucus (D-Mont.) has taken heat from reform advocates whi…

Finance Committee Making “Headway” But Rejects Deadlines

Key negotiators in the Senate Finance Committee refused to set a date for their version of health care reform after their Tuesday meeting, but said they are edging closer to an agreement.

“We’re making significant headway,” committee Chair Ma…

Baucus Leading Recipient Of Health Care Industry Cash

As liberal protesters marched outside, Sen. Max Baucus sat down inside a San Francisco mansion for a dinner of chicken cordon bleu and a discussion of landmark health-care legislation under consideration by his Senate Finance Committee.

White House Sends Health Care Message: More Needs To Be Done

The message from the Obama White House as it pertained to health care reform was repeated ad-nauseum on Sunday: The president still wants bills out of the Senate and House by the time the two chambers head off to recess. But work needs to be d…

Orszag: Republicans Trying To Kill Health Care Reform Through Delay

President Obama’s Director of the Office of Management and Budget, Peter Orszag, accused Senate Republicans on Sunday of trying to kill health care reform by dragging out the legislative process.

Appearing on CNN’s State of the Union, Orszag…

Obama warns against health delay

Barack Obama

US President Barack Obama has called on Congress not to delay the passage of healthcare reform.

"Now is not the time to slow down" reform efforts, he insisted.

His call comes after a group of Senate moderates asked for more time to consider reform proposals, in a bid to achieve a bipartisan consensus.

Mr Obama has made it his priority to overhaul the US healthcare system, and expand coverage to the 47 million Americans without health insurance.

Unprecedented consensus

A number of different reform proposals are currently being published by various congressional committees.

On Wednesday, the Senate health committee became the first congressional panel to vote to approve a healthcare reform bill.

The Senate Finance Committee is also working on a bill, and three House of Representatives committees have published a joint proposal.

Eventually, if lawmakers can agree, a bill combining elements of all of the proposals will be put to a vote in both chambers and be sent to Mr Obama for approval.

HEALTHCARE IN THE US

  • 46 million uninsured, 25 million under-insured
  • Healthcare costs represent 16% of GDP, almost twice OECD average
  • Reform plans would require all Americans to get insurance
  • Some propose public insurance option to compete with private insurers

"In the past few weeks we have forged a level of consensus [on healthcare reform] never before seen in this country," Mr Obama said in a statement at the White House.

And he expressed confidence that healthcare reform would be achieved by the end of the year.

"We are going to get this done. We will reform health care. it will happen this year. I’m absolutely convinced of that."

But Mr Obama’s remarks came after a group of six senators – three Republicans, two Democrats and one Independent – published a letter in which they spoke out against "timelines which prevent us from achieving the best result."

"We believe that taking additional time to achieve a bipartisan result is critical," wrote senators Ben Nelson, Ron Wyden, Mary Landrieu, Susan Collins, Olympia Snowe and Joe Lieberman.

All of the plans under consideration would require Americans to take out insurance, and would bar insurance companies from denying coverage to people with pre-existing conditions.

The House committees’ joint bill and the Senate health committee bills would also create a new, publicly run health plan, which they hope would compete with private insurers and drive down prices.

The Senate finance committee bill is not expected to include a "public option", but would instead set up non-profit medical co-operatives to compete with private insurers. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Obama applauds health ‘milestone’

Senate health committee members Senator Chris Dodd and Senator Tom Harkin

The US Senate health committee has approved a bill to reform America’s healthcare system, becoming the first congressional committee to pass a plan.

The legislation would expand coverage to nearly all Americans, at a cost of some $600bn (£365bn).

US President Barack Obama, who is to speak on healthcare later on Wednesday, has said he wants Congress to pass a healthcare bill by the end of 2009.

Four other congressional committees are also working on reform bills.

Party line vote

Three House of Representatives committees announced a joint proposal on Tuesday, and will begin voting on it on Thursday.

The Senate Finance Committee is also expected to vote on its bill soon.

Eventually, a combined bill will be put before both chambers for approval.

The Senate health committee voted along party lines, with 13 Democrats in favour and 10 Republicans opposed.

The bill would expand healthcare by requiring all Americans to take out health insurance, and providing subsidies to poorer families to help them pay for their coverage.

The chairman of the committee, Senator Edward Kennedy, was not present for the vote, because he is being treated for brain cancer.

Democrat Chris Dodd is acting as committee chairman in his absence.

"This time we’ve produced legislation that by and large I think the American people want," he said.

President Obama also welcomed the vote and urged other congressional committees to complete their bills.

"[This] should give us hope, but it should not give us pause. It should instead provide the urgency for the House and Senate to finish their critical work on health reform before the August recess." </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Jason Rosenbaum: Why Can’t We Have Health Benefits as Good as Chuck Grassley?

Grassley told an Iowa citizen that if they wanted better health care they should get a job with John Deer (which recently laid off hundreds in Iowa) or with the federal government.