The Obama administration released a
health care proposal Monday as a “starting point” for a possible
compromise with Republicans during this week’s planned health care
summit.
The
Within hours, however, leading Republicans firmly
rejected the administration’s blueprint and suggested the summit itself
may be in jeopardy.
“The president has crippled the credibility of this
week’s summit by proposing the same massive government takeover of
health care based on a partisan bill the American people have already
rejected,” Rep.
His
“Our constituents don’t want yet another partisan, back-room bill,” McConnell said.
But Democrats and the
“Health care reform is too important to be sidelined by partisan motives,” said Sen.
“The president wants and believes and our people
deserve an up-or-down vote on health reform,” he said. “This package is
designed to provide us the flexibility to achieve that if the
The release of the
The
—Costs
—Requires everyone to buy insurance or pay a penalty, but adjusts the penalty for some workers.
—Does not include a public option, as some Democrats wanted.
—Adjusts and, for some, increases tax assistance to buy insurance.
—Does not require companies to provide insurance,
but penalizes those that don’t. Penalties would be adjusted to help
smaller businesses, which also get tax credits to provide insurance.
—Delays taxing “Cadillac” health care plans at work, and raises the threshold before those taxes kick in.
—Raises
—Fully closes the “doughnut hole” that can cause a gap in drug coverage under
—Ends the “Cornhusker kickback” that favored
—Establishes new federal oversight of insurance company rate increases.
That last provision has angered some insurance
companies, which have said rising health care costs — not profits — are
to blame for rising premiums.
“The cost of health care reflects the consumption of health care,” said
Rep.
“This bill is simply more bureaucracy, more taxes
and more mandates,” Graves said. “The American people have already
rejected this approach.”
Democrats said the
But
“As much as the president is saying, ‘I’m interested
in bipartisanship,’ this plan isn’t that,” Nielsen said. “As someone
who has worked on this issue for a long time, I’m pleased to see that
they are standing behind the same proposals they’ve been working on for
a year.”
While Thursday’s planned health care summit is still
on, Republicans say they are increasingly skeptical about its prospects
for success.
Rep.
“If it’s going to be a real meeting, I’d be willing
to go there,” Blunt said. “If it’s just going to be a theatrical
performance … I don’t want to waste my time.”
Unless the administration can persuade some
Republicans to vote for some version of its plan, prospects for passage
seem difficult at best, political observers said.
The House, for example, passed its version of health
reform in 2009 by just five votes. And the bill only passed after a
strong anti-abortion amendment from Rep.
The
In addition, using the simple-majority reconciliation process in the
is likely to bring howls of protest from Republicans, and perhaps even
from some moderate Democrats. Last week, Senate Republicans released a
list of 18 Democrats who, they said, opposed using reconciliation to
pass health care reform.
Regardless, a vote in the next few weeks seems unlikely. Senate Majority Leader
—
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