Archive for October 16th, 2009

Shapeshifters & Flipfloppers

Friday, October 16th, 2009

The possibilities of a bipartisan (insert issue) bill are slim. In fact, they never really existed. Yet the marginal Democrats (I’m looking at you, Senator Nelson) continue to go around and proclaim that new legislation that doesn’t have a super-duper supermajority, somewhere in the neighborhood of 80 votes in the Senate, is not legitimate.

Bipartisanship is a virtue to strive for, but at what cost? In my last post, I chastised Democrats for failing to get their acts together, defend their values, and stop arguing with themselves. This time, it’s something more malevolent in the system. The Republicans are trying to barter their way to favorable public policy outcomes. Note: I did not say palatable, I didn’t even say tolerable, nor did I say compromise-that-reflects-their-relative-strength; I said favorable.

How does this work? How do 40 GOP Senators and 178 GOP Congressmen barter their way to favorable policies? By pledging support for ideas, then moving the goal posts. In many ways, this is a Peanuts strip. Lucy tells Charlie Brown that she’ll hold the football for him to kick, and Charlie Brown’s been duped before and is reluctant to try try again. But, Lucy convinces him that “This time, she means it.” So, Charlie gives in and takes a run at the football. Lucy, true to form, pulls it away at the last second and Charlie careens by.

The Republicans make the right noises and say the right things, indicating that they would support a (insert issue) bill if it had certain provisions. Reasonable? Yes. It’s the art of compromising. Senators will transcend party, work ideas from both sides of the aisle into the bill, then a broad, bipartisan coalition will support the bill. Right?

Wrong. At the last minute, after the Democrats have agreed to incorporate Republican ideas, the Republicans pull the football away. They proclaim, “We never liked those ideas. We like these over here instead. If you give us those, we’ll support the bill.” Just like Lucy, the Republicans taunt Charlie Brown again, saying that THIS TIME, they’ll let him kick the football.

For example:

Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa:

  • Then: “I believe that there is a bipartisan consensus to have individual mandates.” Fox News Sunday, June 14, 2009
  • Now: “[T]here are other points as well, but let me mention other points that you didn’t mention. And one would be the individual mandate, which for the first time would have a federal penalty against people who don’t have health insurance…. I’m very reluctant to go along with an individual mandate.”October 6, 2009.

Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky:

“But the core point is this: At the end of the day, if the government plan is either in the bill or out of the bill, whether they will be able to argue successfully or not whether tax funds are gonna be provided for abortion, whether or not they will be able to argue at the end that dollars for health care for illegals is in or out, what we do know is what the core of the bill is going to look like. We know that for sure,” he said.
And the bottom line, said McConnell, is that Republicans don’t like the bill at all.
“It’s going to be a trillion dollar bill,” said McConnell. President Obama has said he won’t sign any bill that exceeds $900 billion over ten years, but what’s a few billion?
“We know it’s going to have half a trillion dollars in Medicare cuts. We know it’s going to raise taxes on individuals and business. So however these other issues are resolved, the core of the bill is a trillion dollar government attempt to take over one-sixth of the economy, which slashes Medicare by half a trillion dollars, and raises taxes on most Americans,” he said. September 30, 2009.

Sen. Grassey, again:

“Chuck Todd asked Grassley whether he’d vote for the bill if it was a good piece of policy that he’d crafted but that couldn’t attract more than a handful of Republican votes. “Certainly not,” replied Grassley. Todd tried again, clarifying that this was legislation Grassley liked, and thought would move the ball forward, but was getting bogged down due to partisanship. Grassley held firm. If a good bill cannot attract Republican support, then it is not a good bill, he argued.Grassley, in other words, is working backward from the votes. If the Gang of Six reaches a compromise that the Senate Republicans don’t support, Grassley will abandon that compromise, regardless of the fact that he’s the guy who built it. The Gang of Six, in other words, falls apart if it can’t assure a vote of 76. Since it seems virtually impossible that such a vote will manifest, it seems similarly unlikely that Grassley will sign his name to the final bill. And Grassley, remember, was willing to say all this publicly. His version of bipartisanship is strikingly partisan.” August 17, 2009.

And on the subject of individual mandates:

  • Senator Jon Kyl, R-Arizona: “This is a stunning assault on liberty” and Senator Jim Bunning, R-Kentucky: These provisions trample on the feedoms of Americans.” September 22, 2009. Both of these esteemed gentlemen ARE on the Finance Committee.

At the end of the day, what it comes down to is that the Republicans are (a) determined to water down and dilute any Democratic efforts at reform, (b) unwilling to lend support to any bill that does not completely reflect their views and any noises of bipartisan compromise are only misleading, ephemeral goalposts, and (c) going to vote no.

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Senator Max Baucus comments on health care

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Today, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Max Baucus, when asked about how the health care bill will fair in Congress, stated that every Democrat will vote for the bill and at least one Republican will vote for it as well. In the midst of negotiations to try to satisfy liberal Democrats without bothering moderates, these words of confidence give a reason for all people in this country to be happy. It appears that an overhaul of the current health care system is on the horizon.

With ongoing political drama, town hall debates that brought out thousands of far right lunatics (to put it mildly), and a health care system that continues to cost more for consumers and provide less care, this statement allows me to take a large sigh of relief. Whether there will be enough senators to support this bill has been a topic of discussion in recent weeks, despite the Democrats control of the senate. With moderate Democrats worried about the cost of the bill, a word of confidence from the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee that these moderates will, in the end, support the bill, is a very relieving thought.

The need for an overhaul of the current health care system goes beyond simply becoming cost efficient and removing the astronomical profits that insurance companies make (although these are perfectly reasonable reasons as well…). It is my personal belief that health care, the act of protecting citizens from diseases and illnesses, is a moral responsibility that the government has. Just as it is the government’s responsibility to provide an army to defend the citizens of the United States, the act of protecting citizens from a fatal illness is something that the government must do as well. With at least 15% of the population in our country completely uninsured, and endless more not getting enough care for their specific medical conditions, the government is not carrying out their responsibility.

Simply put, the current health care system is acting in a way that is morally and ethically wrong. Millions of people today who do not have the necessary treatment for their illnesses will have it in the new system. Beyond all else, this is enough of a reason to change the way health care is run.

Andrew Coleman is a blogger for the Cornell Democrats.