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Why Democrats may jam through health care plan

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
August 21, 2009

Speaker Nancy Pelosi speaks at a news conference after a roundtable discussion on health care issues with religious leaders at St. James Episcopal Church in San Francisco, Thursday, Aug. 20, 2009. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

What will happen if Democrats try the "go it alone" strategy to pass national health care?

That's not even a question in the House, where Speaker Nancy Pelosi has cut Republicans out of health care from the very beginning. House Democrats have been going it alone all along, and if they can agree among themselves on a health care bill, it will pass.

But the Senate is another story. Republicans see the Senate as their great hope, and there's no doubt the GOP could do some serious damage to any Democratic bill. But Republicans have to face the fact that Democrats have the power, on their own, to pass a bill that could ultimately lead to the liberal dream of national health care.

First, the best-case scenario for the GOP. Republican staffers are studying the Senate's arcane rules governing the process known as "reconciliation." Those rules allow the Senate to pass some measures with a simple majority of 51 votes, rather than a filibuster-proof 60 votes. Theoretically at least, Democrats could pass a health care bill with no Republican help even if all 60 Democrats are not on board.

But reconciliation is allowed only on proposals that deal directly with the budget or are primarily fiscal in nature. So Democrats could use reconciliation to pass parts of the health care bill that have a direct fiscal effect, but not other measures creating things like health care supervision agencies. If Democrats try to pass measures that are deemed "extraneous," Republicans could object and have the measures stripped from the bill.

That is, for example, what undoubtedly would have happened to the notorious end-of-life provisions that have now been removed from the Senate Finance Committee's bill. In that same way, it's possible Republicans could kill a lot of what is currently in the health care reform proposals. (In addition, any measure passed by reconciliation would be temporary, usually lasting five years.)

The prospect of a paragraph-by-paragraph reconciliation fight has led to what some Republicans call the "Swiss cheese scenario." Each time Republicans defeat a portion of the bill, they'll poke another hole in the Democrats' ambitions. Poke enough holes, and the Democrats' vaunted health care plan is Swiss cheese.

There's no doubt that prospect scares some influential Democrats. Sen. Robert Byrd himself is opposed to using reconciliation for health care, calling it "an outrage that must be resisted." Sen. Max Baucus calls it "not a good idea," and Sen. Jay Rockefeller says it could create "a bill that goes nowhere." They're warning their colleagues not to take the go-it-alone route.

But there's another way of looking at it. Sure, Democrats can't get everything they want if they have to go through reconciliation. But look at health care reform as an unfinished building. There are plenty of examples of past legislation that began somewhat modestly and expanded as the years went on. The State Children's Health Insurance Program, or S-CHIP, has been enormously expanded. Medicare and Medicare are far bigger today than when they were created. Programs grow over time as lawmakers add features and increase eligibility.

The story could be the same for the current health care proposals, through which Democrats, with no Republican support, could put in place the basic structure of a national health care plan. It doesn't have to be gold-plated, or even finished. That could come later.

"You can build a building that's missing certain features," says one old Senate hand. "Maybe the plumbing's not there, or the wiring. But the bottom line is, you have laid the foundation, and built the structure, and it becomes easier later on to add the plumbing, and add the wiring. You have set up a structure so that all you have to do in the future is make incremental changes."

Veterans of the Senate tend to flinch from the sort of all-out warfare reconciliation could bring. But the fact is, reconciliation might in the end be the Democrats' best option. And it might work. Democrats wouldn't get everything they wanted, but they could create the structure for future growth. Later on, they'll add the plumbing. And the wiring. And maybe a chandelier.

It's precisely that scenario that most terrifies Republicans. Forget about Swiss cheese. Democrats are intent on building something much more substantial, and Republicans don't have the votes to stop them.

Byron York, The Examiner's chief political correspondent, can be contacted at byork@washingtonexaminer.com. His column appears on Tuesday and Friday, and his stories and blog posts appears on  ExaminerPolitics.com



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Soldier4110

Aug 20, 2009

Doesn't the reconciliation rule cover only bills that would affect the deficit? If so, the Dems are stopped in place. If not, then the Dems can change the rules, I suspect, with their voting bloc. The one hope I can find in the above scenario is that the changes in the bill won't begin until a year or so passes. If so, and a Republican-majority Congress is elected in 2010, can this bill not be repealed?

 

mac691

Aug 21, 2009

If this does get rammed thru, the clarion call for the next election should be either the outright repeal of the measure, or to starve the program by refusing to fund it with a new conservative majority.

 

Roy Lofquist

Aug 21, 2009

There's always the thermonuclear option. Demand every bill and motion be read on the floor and refuse unanimous consent. They won't even be able to break for lunch until sometime in the summer of '13.

 

Rick

Aug 21, 2009

"In addition, any measure passed by reconciliation would be temporary, usually lasting 5 years"

Does that mean the party in power 5 years from now could let those passed measures expire, or to retain them go through this again?

 

MisterStiffy

Aug 21, 2009

It is hard to believe that ADULTS are seriously considering the legislative monstrosity called "health care." The very idea, considered from a bureaucratic perspective, is ludicrous. Nothing in this world is more inefficient that the U.S. Federal bureaucracy

 

Marvin Pullman

Aug 21, 2009

I do not try to hid my name, I want the them to know what I think and who I am, wonder how these people would feel with 200 million senior citizens on the white house lawn, or better than that, in their face, perferred, "sitting on it"

Get the senior citizen fired up, if we are going to be to go home and die, we might as well do that in DC, and maybe convince some of them they should have maybe considered things more carefully.

Do away with their medical program, put them on what they want for us, if it is good enough for the goose, it is good enough for the gander. Their retirement can be social security also, talk about saving money, and paying off the nation debt.

Marvin Pullman
WAKE UP THE SHEEP:

 

AmericaFirst

Aug 21, 2009

I cannot believe Dems would even be considering ramming this bill through with so many Americans outraged over this. This should show all of us that they really don't care about what the average american thinks or wants. They only care about themselves. SOMETHING MUST BE DONE!!

 

jhffmn

Aug 21, 2009

Reconciliation is the best option for the republicans as well.

The public is largely against Obamacare, and will support the Senate GOP as they blow up the senate when the Democrats break the rules to pass their bill.

This is what I'm hoping for at least. Nothing will make it through senate until after the democrats lose their majority.

They can shut down cap and trade, obamacare, and who knows maybe a second stimulus too. Everyone wins.

 

CatoRenasci

Aug 21, 2009

If the Democrats try to use reconciliation, the Republicans should refuse ALL unanimous consent to ANYTHING - make them read the entire bill aloud, every motion, etc. Essentially stop the Senate from functioning completely. Probably the best thing the country could do would be to have the Senate take literally NO action for a year!

 

Bill

Aug 21, 2009

"Programs grow over time as lawmakers add features and increase eligibility."

And that is the exact reason why I oppose "health care reform". We all know it's going to grow over time and increase in scope. If it passes, my grandchildren will be talking to a government official to get the health care they need.

Say "no" to a nanny states that feels it knows how to spend your money better than you.

 

Kylie

Aug 21, 2009

All you conservatives that thought it was important spend to defend our freedom...but didnt explain how.

And our freedoms should be abridge but less join the rest of the industrialize world and not let people die in the streets. And maybe let them be well enough to be productive tax payers --crazy isn't it.

Global universe people let your brother die in the street you will be right next to him

 

Rick Caird

Aug 22, 2009

Ah, Kylie is back. the topic is reconciliation, but Kylie appears too dense to understand that.

Soldier4110 mentioned the problem with using reconciliation. As I understand it, anything that increases the deficit requires 60 votes, not 51. So, if the CBO weighs in with bigger numbers (as they did with the 10 year deficit projection), then reconciliation will be a lot more dicey than is being claimed.

I am certainly not sure, but I wonder if the reconciliation tactic is one big bluff.

Rick

 

Age

Aug 22, 2009

The analogy to health care being like building is probably correct BUT the idea that it will be easy to make additional changes later is patently false. If you know ANYTHING about building/construction, you can't just "add stuff later" without taking a whole lot more time and money to make those changes. How on earth do you add the plumbing and electrical when the framing and drywall is already done and the walls are painted and decorated. It will just dig the bottomless pit of debt even deeper.

 

potkas7

Aug 23, 2009

"You can build a building that's missing certain features," says one old Senate hand. "Maybe the plumbing's not there, or the wiring. But the bottom line is, you have laid the foundation, and built the structure, and it becomes easier later on to add the plumbing, and add the wiring. You have set up a structure so that all you have to do in the future is make incremental changes."

Did you ever try to plumb or wire a building after the walls were up? It's darned near impossible without making a big mess. This is not the metaphor I would have chosen if I were trying to convince a skeptical populace.

 

Wayne Boyd

Aug 23, 2009

You would think that the house democrats, supposedly being adults, would stop and use a little common sense here. Has anyone stopped to think of the repercussions they will have to deal with if they just ram their Obamacare bill through and down our throats?
I don't understand why they are so hell bent on changing the entire system. If your car breaks down you don't replace the entire engine, you fix what broke and everything runs smooth again.
But, like someone else said, if the dems have to pass a "swiss cheese" bill then if nothing changes in 2010 America as we know and love will cease to exist.
We will eventually become a "nanny state" where the government will tell us what we can and can't do because we don't have the intellect to decide for ourselves. Somehow this plan needs to be squashed!

 

supagold

Aug 23, 2009

The whole point of a national health care system is to get all americans on the government's tit. The Dems understand this - why do you think they're pushing so hard? They know that once you put an entitlement like this in place, you'll NEVER be able to get rid of it. That's why reconciliation will work if they do it. Once even part of it is in place, it will only grow larger.

 

jeremias

Aug 23, 2009

obama must be destroyed. every weapon must be used. don't worry about the "truth" of statements; obama must be destroyed, that is the only truth that counts. obama is a socialist and a traitor. obama got the lockerbie terrorist released to curry favor with libya and the jihadist. obama wants Isael to be tossed into the sea. obama wants to kill old people to make money for ACORN. obama is deliberately ruining the economy so the socialists can take over free enterprise business. obama loves castro and cuba and venezuela's chavez and iran's achdeminijihad. obama loves the jihad whether it's maximum or mini.

 

Peggy97478

Aug 24, 2009

I hope the Village Idiots on the Left side of the aisle don't underestimate the several MILLION taxpayers of this country who are willing to drop everything and march on Washington DC the minute they try to force feed us this Obamination through a scuzzy maneuver like the Reconciliation Act. If they can't pass it on the merits, and with bi-partisan votes, then go back to the drawing board! We are MAD and we DON'T FORGET. 2010 AND 2012 will prove it.

 

TexRancher

Aug 24, 2009

With the behavior of the Democrats who are willing to bend or change the rules at their whim, it should be obvious to everyone above the 1/4 wit level that this is about control, NOT healthcare. The BOTOX Queen Nancy so much as admits it with her statements that they're going to pass it no matter what. Representatative govenment is dead under Democrats! The people are speaking out, but they aren't listening.
Now we're getting to the point where Obama and company will even use Kennedy's health for the battle cry "DO IT FOR TEDDY"! Just watch, it's coming. All the while Kennedy is up to his same ole tricks of changing rules to suit him like four years ago and now he wants the rules changed back. How did the Drunken Submarine commander ever get the title "LION OF THE SENATE". I think I'm gonna puke!

 

tucanofulano

Sep 1, 2009

NO WAY there'll be any kind of Bill without making it clear ILLEGAL ALIENS ARE EXCLUDED, and E-VERIFY IS FOR EVERYONE, ALL THE TIME, EVERY TIME.

 


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