Obama goes all in for health care reform passage
Wednesday, March 03, 2010 at 3:17 pm
WASHINGTON — If anyone doubted the willingness of the White House to stick its neck out for health care reform this year, President Obama likely put those questions to rest this afternoon. Speaking at the White House to promote his newly tweaked reform proposal, the president rejected the Republicans’ “tinker around the edges” approach, instead calling on lawmakers to hold a vote on comprehensive reform “in the next few weeks.”
“Congress owes the American people a final vote on health care reform,” Obama said, vowing, “I will do everything in my power to make the case for reform.”
Other highlights:
1) A Call for Reconciliation: Pointing to past legislation that has been enacted using the budget reconciliation approach — including the sweeping Bush tax cuts — Obama argued that health care reform “deserves the same kind of up or down vote.”
2) Rejection of Single Payer Health Care: Supporters of a Medicare-for-all-style system of reform have complained that such a proposal has rarely been mentioned throughout the debate. They can’t make that claim anymore, though neither will they like the attention Obama gave single-payer Wednesday. “In America,” the president said, “it would be neither practical nor realistic.”
3) Comprehensive vs. Piecemeal Reform: Republicans, behind Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), have argued that “Congress doesn’t do comprehensive well.” They’ve been pushing for Democrats to scrap their comprehensive proposal in favor of smaller, more incremental reform steps — a strategy that Obama rejected outright. “The insurance reforms rest on everybody having access to coverage,” he said. “Health reform only works if you take care of all of these problems at once.”
4) Funding: Covering 30+ million uninsured folks will cost money, Obama conceded. But the additional costs — which he estimates to be $100 billion per year — can largely be covered using funds the country already spends on health care (roughly $2.3 trillion annually). “The bottom line is [that] our proposal is paid for,” he said.
5) The Enthusiasm Factor: Liberals have been all over Obama for what many viewed as a tepid approach to health reform in the last year. He let Congress draft the bills, they say, and he hasn’t nearly used the bully pulpit to sell his message that health reform is not just a moral concern but an economic necessity. His actions in recent weeks indicate that he’s ready to get more aggressive. And his promise to do “everything in my power” to pass reform this year is sure to light a fire under at least some moderate Democrats who have been wary that they’ve been left dangling in the wind.
“I do not know how this plays out politically, but I know that it’s right,” Obama concluded. “Let’s get it done.”
Waiting now for the GOP attacks.
10 Comments
Comment posted March 3, 2010 @ 4:19 pm
This is not “all in”. Single payer is the only way that Progressives should support Mr. Obama.
We want free health care just like he promised in his campaign, and that is why we voted for him.
We own the both houses of Congress along with the White House. What is the problem with implementing what the people want and deserve?
Pingback posted March 3, 2010 @ 6:42 pm
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Comment posted March 3, 2010 @ 10:47 pm
Paul
Neither does T-Paw Is A Jerk
Although I agree with him on Single Payer. It also explains why this Registered Nurse who has been in the trenches fighting for Single Payer will never support this awful Bill, which is a very, very bad bill..
Trackback posted March 4, 2010 @ 12:59 am
President Obama and the democrats are ready 2 rumble…
WASHINGTON — If anyone doubted the willingness of the White House to stick its neck out for health care reform this year, President Obama likely put those questions to rest this afternoon. Speaking at the White House to promote his newly tweaked reform…
Comment posted March 4, 2010 @ 5:36 am
Wow being a republican i did not vote for Obama, but i have watched this man closely ever since he took office and as time has gone by i have grown more and more respect for him.
In my opinion this is a man who has a clear vision and wants to do all he can in his capacity to help the American people. His unwavering stand on health reform is admirable.
Pingback posted March 4, 2010 @ 8:47 am
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Comment posted March 4, 2010 @ 11:36 am
Of course, he didn’t campaign on single payer. Neither did Clinton. She already tried that once and knew it couldn’t pass Congress.
Congress writes bills! The President just signs them.
Comment posted March 4, 2010 @ 11:54 am
To T-Paw is a Jerk:
I think your ideal of having a, “free health care”, is incorrect. Yes to you it is free and to those who also receive it, as well. I’m all for it, because I feel like everyone should be granted the right to live. But it’s not free someone has to pay which would be the wealthy tax payers which i believe is amazing. Just change the way you view it is all i’m saying. It’s not free.
Comment posted March 4, 2010 @ 11:59 am
I actually want to change my name to of a Ready Mind vs. the Antonym being reluctant.
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