Democrats Stall Obama's Healthcare Reform

Blue Dog Democrats in the House have prevented Pelosi from bringing legislation to the floor

July 28, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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The real story now on healthcare reform is not the partisan bickering, which tends to dominate the news coverage, but something more cerebral: the tension between President Obama's call for action and many lawmakers' concerns that they have yet to find a winning policy formula for reform.

In his prime-time news conference last Wednesday, Obama laid out some absolutes. "The bill I sign must slow the growth of healthcare costs," he said, noting that Democrats had come up with proposals that would "change incentives so that doctors and nurses are free to give patients the best care, just not the most expensive care."

But that's only part of the story. Inside Congress and the White House, many are in fact still grappling with doubts about the strength of these and other proposals. As of last week, the White House Council of Economic Advisers wascalling up policy experts to get their take on potential ideas, and senators are saying they need more time. So it was no big surprise when Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid decided last week that the Senate would not begin debating a bill until September, thereby conceding Obama's August deadline would not be met.

Though much has been written on the labyrinthine subject of healthcare policy, there are still many unknowns, and it is partly these unknowns that are giving policymakers pause. As Democrats craft their bills, they are eyeing ideas being developed and tested in hospitals and physicians' offices around the country, and they are trying to figure out not only if these creative approaches to medicine work but also their potential savings. "There are a lot of innovative things happening around the country," says David Harlow, who runs a health law practice in Boston and has helped shape Massachusetts health laws. "What we are talking about is a whole series of local experiments" that Washington is considering adopting.

The White House has called for creating a new panel of doctors and experts to look for ways to cut Medicare spending. But Congress is busy reviewing all sorts of other proposals. There is talk about giving bonuses to doctors and hospitals that provide higher-quality care. There is talk about rewarding healthy workers with lower premiums. And there is talk about testing out new business models that, in theory, let doctors spend more time with patients and less time on billing.

This trying search for ways to change how money is spent on healthcare got a major jolt this month, when Douglas Elmendorf, director of the Congressional Budget Office, testified that the House's bill would not achieve "the sort of fundamental change" needed to curb rising costs. The political world lit up as if a mild-mannered house guest had just slapped his host in the face.

Yet Elmendorf's comments should not have been all that shocking to anyone following the debate. The fiscally conservative "blue dog" Democrats had said as much the week before. In an angry letter to Democratic congressional leaders, they had argued that the bill being put forward failed to make substantive changes. "We must be much more aggressive in bending the cost curve," they wrote. "We cannot simply 'add' new consumers to a broken system."

Last week, after a slew of rough headlines for Democratic leaders, blue dogs finally got an audience, and they've effectively prevented House Speaker Nancy Pelosi from bringing legislation to the floor. The House Energy and Commerce Committee, with 36 Democrats, including seven blue dogs, had been scheduled to meet all last week to try to approve the House bill. But after last Monday's boisterous session, which lasted late into the night at the urging of committee Chairman Henry Waxman, plans changed. The following day Obama summoned the panel to the White House, and scheduled committee meetings were canceled in favor of private deliberations.

Negotiations are continuing this week. As of Tuesday morning, the blue dogs were reviewing a "compromise" offer from Waxman. Meanwhile, the Senate Finance Committee, led by Sen. Max Baucus, is still deliberating behind closed doors, trying to hammer out a bipartisan deal with Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley and others.

Tags:
healthcare,
healthcare reform

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Is there a stimulas bill for bad rotting front teeth? My friend cant get a job because of his front teeth?

tamie of KS 7:17PM July 08, 2010

my doughter is 15 i ask her dose you wont to go to collage and she said why evan bother if obama is going to kill us anyway .this is bad obama you need to set down and shut the hell up and lissing to us the people we dont wont your dame obama heltcare

sharon of FL 11:03PM March 19, 2010

If the health care that the President and all his cabinet is so great why are they not on it also.

Are they not American citzen also.

If the laws they pass are so great why are they not willing to use them. I think " the President made the statement We are not talking about me. We are talking about You what makes us any Less then you Mr. President I have the best health insurance in the world.

Why is it that if you want change for all then start at home.

Not taking vacations using money that could be spent on health care. Stop Nancy from using tax money to travel back and forth to her home state.

Lets get back to where the goverment for the people by the people .

Not by the Goverment.

Thank you

PENNY

Penny of TX 6:55PM August 15, 2009

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