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Waxman digs in against compromise health plan

By: Susan Ferrechio
Chief Congressional Correspondent
July 10, 2009

Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., said Thursday that he did not believe a health care reform bill could pass the House without including a public health option. (AP photo)

While the Senate debates what kind of health care reform bill to write, lawmakers on the other side of the Capitol have put their foot down, saying the House of Representatives will not pass a bill without a strong government-run health insurance option.

"I cannot see a bill passing without a public plan," said Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., who chairs the House Energy and Commerce Committee and is a chief architect of the House health care reform bill that will be introduced Friday.

House Democrats are in no mood to compromise on health care, having just taken lots of heat from the Left for passing an energy reform bill that gave away billions of dollars in free pollution permits to electric companies, oil refineries, and manufacturers.

"You can't compromise on health care," said Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Calif., co-chairwoman of the chamber's most liberal faction, the 80-plus-member Progressive Caucus. "There is a point where compromise gets you nowhere."

Having all but abandoned bipartisanship for health care, the focus for Democratic leaders is on keeping peace between moderate and liberal members of their party. The House bill includes a plan to create a massive government-run insurance plan, but such a proposal would likely alienate more than a dozen centrist Senate Democrats needed to ensure passage.

Senate negotiators are instead weighing the creation of a national insurance cooperative, though that is losing support because the liberal faction opposes it. Senate Democrats are also discussing a government-run plan that would take effect only if the private health insurance industry did not reform itself within a certain time frame.

But if the Democrats pass such a plan in the Senate, it is all but doomed in the House, where liberals have vowed to vote against it.

Members f the Progressive Caucus gave White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel a verbal lashing about the trigger plan at a closed-door meeting. Emanuel had told the Wall Street Journal that the trigger approach was under consideration, though President Barack Obama issued a statement from his overseas trip reaffirming his support for a comprehensive government-run plan.

"We told him that we won't put up with that," Woolsey said.

The health care debate is bound to get more complicated Friday, when the Congressional Budget Office is scheduled to release its cost estimate of the House bill. The CBO has estimated costs of the Senate proposals to exceed $2 trillion.

Waxman said he wants much of the House bill to be paid for through savings, but said a special surtax on high incomes could be imposed to pay for the plan. Three House committees will begin work on the bill next week.

Waxman insisted he is not "going to draw lines" on the public option but pointed out that there is little wiggle room in the House.

"From the point of view of the Progressives, the public option is a compromise," said Waxman, who is a member of that caucus.

sferrechio@washingtonexaminer.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.

carly

Jul 9, 2009

I find it ironic that the reps are from calif, a broke state. I dont want your health care.. or should I say, sick care insurance.. I havent seen to many cures for anything...just pill pushing

 

Nick Beddoes

Jul 10, 2009

A recent poll shows that three fourths of Americans want and approve of a "public option" in the health care plan working its way through Congress. Rep Waxman is right to insist that the public option be included. It would expand choice and help keep private insurance companies honest. A single payer plan would be even better, as it would eliminate the hoards of cubicle monkeys who provide no medical care but sit around denying claims and increasing the cost of health care.

 

BHO Must Fail

Jul 10, 2009

And a recent poll also revealed that 80% of Americans said don't $%&@# with my Health Insurance...so if you ask those already on the Public dole, I'm sure they want a public option...

 

Nick Beddoes

Jul 11, 2009

"BHO Must Fail" (?) is all wet. 3/4 of ALL Americans favor the public option. It would not interfere with those who wish to keep their private plans. Wake up and smell the coffee.

 

PG

Jul 12, 2009

Nick,
The NYT poll you cite was very biased in selection of who they polled and the questions that they asked. They over-sampled Obama voters and asked them leading questions.

Single payer = rationing of health care.

 

Wynn

Jul 12, 2009

Am I the only one left alive who remembers The Vuskovic Plan of Salvador Allende? Obama is doing the exact same sort of thing here in the US, and health reform fits the pattern. Allende would have fallen without the US push.

 


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