Fire Dog Lake asked me to sign an online petition calling for the death of the Senate health care reform bill. Instead I filled out their unsubscribe form. I'd just as soon the Tea Bagging Right hold a monopoly on political purity. I myself am a recovering purist. Back in the day, I thought that a vote for Nader was worth it, even if it meant handing the White House to the Republicans. I was tired of compromise.
We see how well that worked out.
Yes, it is infuriating that you need 60 votes to do routine business in the Senate. Yes, Joe Lieberman is insufferable. And Yes, maybe a bill more to liberals' liking would have emerged from the Senate had pieces of the bill been shoved through using the budget reconciliation process.
Nevertheless, the Senate bill would cover an additional 30 million people; end the denial of coverage for pre-existing conditions; end the equally pernicious practice of capping benefits; and most importantly, begin to compensate health care providers for good outcomes, not sheer number of procedures, thus reigning in skyrocketing medical inflation.
What's not to like?
I did get a useful email from MoveOn contrasting the House and Senate bills. The former does have a public option, and pays for the plan with a tax increase on wealthy Americans rather than taxing so-called Cadillac plans, which is how the Senate pays for the bill. I have no idea which is the better policy. The House plan is probably the better politics for Democrats,given that rich people don't vote for Democrats anyway, unless they're movie stars, and given that a lot of these Cadillac plans were negotiated by labor unions. If the conference committee opts for the House tax rather than the Senate tax, that's fine with me.
But I'm not into tilting at the public option windmill. It's dead. There aren't the votes in the Senate for it. I hate it that Democrats would filibuster their own party's signature piece of domestic legislation over the public option, but unless Fire Dog Lake can cast an Imperius Curse on Lieberman, Lincoln, Landrieu and Nelson, going to the wall on this point means no health care reform at all. I don't want to be in the position of saying to uninsured Americans, You'll have to wait until we take Joe Lieberman to the woodshed.
Instead of cutting off your nose to spite your face, why don't liberals take what they can get today, and work like the devil to elect liberal Senators and minimize losses in the House next year, so that progressive legislation doesn't need smokin' Joe's vote?
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