Low-level White House officials have reached out to certain reform groups that have staked their ground on the need for a public option, I'm told, and warned them not to spend any more money advocating for the policy--that it's just not worth it. That suggestion hasn't been heeded--at least for now. The Progressive Change Campaign Committee, and Democracy for America raised over $100,000 to continue running this ad in Iowa after Congress returns from recess.So, it's the White House's mentality of "Deal At Any Cost" versus Democratic progressives rallying to make a play on reconciliation. Kind of an ugly situation all the way around, but we'll know more as the President's speech on Wednesday approaches.But a White House official told the New York Times "It's so important to get a deal [that Obama] will do almost anything it takes to get one," which strikes some as an all-too-apt description of the White House's mentality.
Many believe that the administration--reportedly in fevered negotiations with Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME)--will put their efforts into securing a health care reform bill that calls for a public option as a fallback--to be triggered at a later date if and only if private insurers don't manage to rein in premium prices on their own.
House progressives have vowed to oppose such a scheme and some are renewing their insistence that they won't accept such a compromise.
If that effort fails, the thinking is that the "reconciliation" option--which circumvents a filibuster, and could allow Congress to enact a fairly robust public plan--could still be in play.
That said, the process is still very fluid, and much still hinges on what happens in the days leading up to the President's landmark health care address before Congress next week.
Let's be honest here: Obama has indeed staked his term on health care reform. If we get reform, real reform, he'll be remembered for it.
If he blows it, he's done.
1 comment:
If he blows it, he's done.
roger that.
one term and he's done.
and it will be his own fault for selecting that little chicago north side you know what as his chief of staff.
Howard Dean was the obvious and only choice.
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