
In the spotlight are 39 Democrats who voted against the House’s original health care measure
Democrats hold 253 of the House’s 431 currently filled seats, and 216
votes are needed for passage. The bill won’t pass unless some of those
39 switch their positions.
Democratic leaders hope to vote by this weekend, but they’re finding it difficult to push wavering members off the fence.
“I’ll vote the way my district wants me to vote,” said Rep.
Rep.
Rep.
The
Altmire, a second-term congressman, said Obama’s
pitch Tuesday was that “the economy will turn around and people will
judge the effects of the health care bill in that context.”
Sometimes colleagues apply the heat. Minnick said
pressure to fall in line with other Democrats usually came at House
caucus meetings, but mostly he was listening to his
“That is more the pressure that I tend to pay
attention to,” he said. “I try pretty hard to be more responsive to
that than I do to arm-twisting from colleagues or leadership here.”
The pressure will only grow before the final vote. Interest groups on both sides plan to spend at least
Tuesday that “any Democrats who might think they can get away with a
‘yes’ vote for the Obama-Pelosi health care bill should brace
themselves for an all-out blitz courtesy of the NRCC.”
Also raising concerns about the bill are Employers for a Healthy Economy, a
on a TV ad in 17 states and on national cable. The ad, which began
running last Wednesday and will continue through this Saturday, charges
that the bill would mean “billions in new taxes … more mandates on
businesses.”
Pressure is also strong from the other side. Health
Care for America Now, a coalition of liberal groups and labor unions,
launched a
through Friday in 11 swing districts, including Altmire’s. The
coalition and like-minded groups plan to spend
MoveOn.org, another liberal group, plans to spend
Obama has met recently with blocs of liberals and
members of the Congressional Black and Hispanic caucuses, and had
one-on-ones with lawmakers.
Altmire had three conversations in the last 10 days with Obama; the most recent came Monday.
“We talked policy,” he said.
Altmire had voted against the House bill. Among his
concerns were its income tax surcharge on the wealthy and a mandate
that employers offer health insurance. Obama noted that the surcharge
is gone and the mandate has been eased in the measure’s final version.
Altmire said he remained unsure whether the
legislation would curb costs, and that this week’s furor over the
complicated process that congressional leaders were planning to use to
pass it was troubling his constituents.
House leaders are leaning toward not voting directly on the
measure. Instead, they plan to have the House vote on a rule governing
debate on a “sidecar” bill intended to modify the
legislation. House leaders of both parties have used this obscure
process many times to expedite bills, but never for such sweeping
legislation.
This way, House members never would vote directly on the
which other states wouldn’t get. That might insulate House members
against attack ads before November’s elections charging that they’d
voted for the
However, Altmire and a lot of other members say the public often sees such maneuvers as sneaky ways to avoid tough choices.
“It taints the process for my constituents,” he said, “and so it weighs on my view of the process.”
Obama is scrambling to push the bill through the House in time to salvage his trip to
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