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Author: James Shott              Category: AC Analysis, Opinion

Chaos: Watching Democrats make sausage in the United States Senate

Sausage

Observing the spectacle in the U.S. Senate the last couple of weeks, and particularly last weekend, has really highlighted the confusion and desperation gripping the leadership in the U.S. Senate. The manic effort to push through a (so-called) health care reform bill is truly remarkable, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is going to extraordinary lengths to make sure some sort of bill is passed before Christmas.

Millions of Americans, watching in astonishment as this tawdry episode unfolds, want to know, “What’s the hurry?” It’s not as if there is an urgent need for health care reform – the situation simply isn’t critical, as evidenced by the fact that the helpful elements of the bill, such as they are, will not go into effect for years. Worse, there is little true reform in the bill. This is all about politics: an artificial deadline created to address an artificial crisis.

President Barack Obama campaigned on health care reform, among other things, and he’s set one deadline after another to accomplish this. The Congress has so far failed to respond to his demands, despite strong Democrat majorities in both Houses. So, it’s time to pass something — anything.

Sen. Reid knows that if this bill isn’t passed before the recess, then when senators go home for the holidays, their New Years won’t be happy. Their constituents will be giving them an ear-full, and when they come back next year, some of them may have changed their minds.

Polls taken on and after December 10 plainly show that voters do not like health care reform as the Democrats envision it and support is insufficient to warrant even a vote on this bill, let alone this irrational effort to jam it down our throats in the waning days before the holiday recess:
NBC News/Wall Street Journal, 47 percent think it’s a bad idea, 32 percent think it’s a good idea;
Associated Press/GfK Roper: 44 percent oppose Congress’ plans, 36 percent support;
USA Today/Gallop: 43 percent would advise their member of Congress to vote against, 36 percent to vote for;
ABC News/Washington Post: 53 percent disapprove of the way President Obama is handling health care reform, 44 percent approve.

Democrat leaders must think they are invincible. And why not: they have control of Congress and the White House. They believe they can do whatever they want, such as exclude Republicans from the legislative process, and pass legislation without regard for their constituent’s concerns and opposition, and everyone will be happy.

But the product this arrogant attitude produced is so objectionable that in addition to nearly all Republicans, it has alienated more than a few Democrats, and the effort to patch it up and make everyone happy is comical. Some don’t like the public option, while others insist on it. Some object to public financing of abortion, while others demand it. Some don’t like the degree of government control inherent in the concept, while others object to the exorbitant costs the bill will create, and the tax burden it will put on businesses and individuals. Some don’t like the cuts in Medicaid that will further punish doctors and hospitals, which already are paid less than the cost of the service they provide to Medicare patients. There’s something for nearly everyone to hate in this bill.

Sen. Reid could scrap this embarrassment and start over, seek actual bipartisan input and develop bills of modest size and scope that will actually address the problems in health care in a mature and responsible manner. But that idea apparently isn’t crazy enough for Sen. Reid. No, he prefers to stick to his guns, keep the controversial elements in the bill and buy off opponents with your tax dollars, or with minor changes to provisions of the bill that can then be undone during the compromise conference with the House.

Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-LA) changed her mind several days ago and agreed to support the bill. Her price was $300 million for Louisiana. Sen. Ben Nelson (D-NE), who had made a principled stand against the federal financing for abortion, has also been bought off. His price was a concession on the abortion feature and tens of millions in Medicaid funding that would pay Nebraska’s Medicaid expansion bill forever.

With sweetheart deals like this, “The Price is Right” is the most popular game on Capitol Hill, and pretty soon other senators are going to figure this out. What kind of present is your state getting out of this?

This health care reform process is the most chaotic and incomprehensible mess in decades, or perhaps in America’s history. It features senators being called to work late at night, over the weekend in a blizzard; it’s a bill that nobody has seen as of last Friday that had hundreds of pages added to it on Saturday; it includes cuts to Medicare and other programs, and massive tax increases to accompany our double-digit unemployment.

“Brute-force central planning,” “the Edsel of health care plans,” “Let Me Call You Sweetheart” … however you want to describe it, this sordid process cannot yield good legislation. As they say in the data business, “garbage in, garbage out.”

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  1. From http://thehill.com/homenews/senate/73283-senate-healthcare-votes-set-up-final-action-on-christmas-eve

    Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) asked members of both parties to remain civil amid growing tensions in the Senate exacerbated by the high-stakes fight over healthcare and the long hours.

    Republicans hoping to block healthcare reform have thrown procedural objections against the Democrats, forcing a series of late night and early morning votes.

    “Because of the long hours we’ve spent here, for weeks now there’s a lot of tension in the Senate,” Reid said. He invoked Rodney King in asking lawmakers “let’s just all try to get along,” adding that he hoped senators would “go back to their gentlemanly ways.”

    Reid also mentioned the Christmas holiday, telling senators it was a time to reflect “on peace and good things in life.”

    * * *

    In other words, when you are being mugged, please hand over your wallet and watch politely, or the mugger will think you are rude. And don’t forget to thank the mugger for not taking your shirt and shoes.

  2. James Shott says:

    Yes, civility is what we need in Washington. It never occurred to Harry that we need statesmen who are more interested in the nation than their own personal or party agenda.

    And, if Nelson pulls the Nebraska deal out, he will have given away his vote for nothing more than a concession on federally funded abortion that the more radical members will undo in the conference committee.

  3. Paul Stewart says:

    Well I disagree with the tone of your presentation. What’s the hurry? What a stupid question…. Americans are dying too early and too often in the face of the best medicine in the world to which they don’t have access….

    Let them suffer? Let them die? Pay as you go? What kind of ideology is that – let them wait more? How many must suffer and die before you see the error of your ways?

    To me, in any reasonable and objective assessment, that is a criminal attitude… Crimes against the weak, the young, the old and the poor. And worse, it extends into the ranks of the general population – people that are middle class who can’t afford proper health coverage. If this was happening in another country, you would be outraged and decry what a backward society… Maybe the country you think you see is not what it really is…

    I say emphatically – well done! I say it to all of America – not democrats necessarily but necessarily democrats in this instance because they got it done.

    Instead of attacking another nation, they have attacked the real problems of America… and solved them… Urgency indeed was and still is necessary and much too long over due….

  4. James Shott says:

    The question to which you refer is only stupid if you have no idea how the bill the Senate passed is set up, which is apparently the case with you, Paul.

    The income feature begins immediately, but the service side is delayed until 2014. If this situation is so urgent, if people are going to suffer and die, why didn’t the radical liberals put together something honest that will take effect immediately, not five years down the road. Urgency? Nope. Sorry. Couldn’t be very urgent.

    Unfortunately, the typical liberal ideologue has plenty of concern for needs, and little concern for the details of how to address them.

    What is criminal is pawning this crap off as effective reform. If you will just allow yourself to be objective, you will see what a farce this entire process is and has been.

    America is the one country on Earth that is truly enlightened in its approach to government and individual freedom, and you and your fellow liberals have screwed it up with government intervention so heavy that it doesn’t work anymore. We need less government, not more, as this bill mandates.

    And now you want to take that even further, and undo what the Founders did 233 years ago, and turn the U.S. into a socialist state with a health care system like Canada and Great Britain.

    No thanks, Paul.

    If that’s what you want, pack up your stuff and move there.




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