Path is clearing for House to pass health bill
Liberals look ready to OK plan
By The Associated Press
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Published: October 31, 2009
WASHINGTON — They may not like it, but many House liberals look ready to accept a compromise health care bill, putting Democratic leaders well on the way to delivering on President Barack Obama’s call for overhaul.
After claiming for months they couldn’t vote for a bill without the strongest possible government-run insurance option, liberals are putting aside their disappointment over the weaker version in the legislation for a historic chance to remake America’s medical system.
"The current language is far weaker than what I would have preferred, and I think that is also true of the Progressive Caucus,”
Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, D-Mo., a member of the
Congressional Black Caucus, said Friday. "But because I did not come up here to participate in gridlock and acrimony, I have told leadership that I am willing to compromise.”
Obama privately told House liberals they should chalk up a win.
Leaders from the Progressive, Black, Hispanic and Asian-Pacific American caucuses met at the
White House on Thursday evening with Obama, who listened to their concerns and praised their efforts.
"He looked at us and he said, ‘You guys ought to be walking around like you won because you brought back the public option,’” said
Rep. Mike Honda, D-Calif.
House floor debate could begin late next week on the sweeping bill that extends coverage to 96 percent of Americans, imposes new requirements on individuals and employers to get insurance and provides subsidies for lower-income people.
The bill includes a public insurance plan that would pay providers and hospitals rates negotiated by the Health and Human Services secretary.
In one bit of sobering news, the
Congressional Budget Office estimated that only about 6 million people would sign up and that premiums for the government plan could be higher than for private coverage. The CBO says sicker people with higher costs probably would be attracted to the government plan. By comparison, 162 million people would remain covered through employer plans.
There are still concerns from moderates over the bill’s cost and long-term spending implications, with disputes to be resolved on how to block federal funding of abortions and prevent illegal immigrants from getting taxpayer-funded care.
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