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My Left Nutmeg

Dodd: "We are going to get the public option"

by: catchlightning

Tue Oct 06, 2009 at 15:50:07 PM EDT


cross-posted from Working America's 'Main Street' blog

Standing alongside Vice President Joe Biden and 4th District Congressman Jim Himes (D-CT), Senator Chris Dodd (D-CT) yesterday told a crowd of more than 400 supporters and guests how crucial the recovery program and health care reform are to the economy, then added emphatically: "We are going to get the public option" and received an extended, cheering ovation.

I can tell you because I was there.

The occasion was an event, featuring the Vice President, chosen to highlight transportation infrastructure investments flowing from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, at a site adjacent to a reconstruction project on Connecticut's Merritt Parkway near Exit 46 in Fairfield.

Dodd's remarks came as he and other Senate leaders prepare for expected health care bill merger sessions.  That is assuming that the bill passed by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee -- which has a public option -- is to be merged with one yet-to-be-passed by the Finance Committee -- which does not.   A vote in the Finance Committee has reportedly been delayed again.

catchlightning :: Dodd: "We are going to get the public option"
Reports keep surfacing that Finance chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) may not have the votes to pass his deeply flawed bill, which doesn't control insurance costs, out of his committee.

If and when the Finance Committee ever does report their health bill (I won't call it 'reform'), the merger sessions will involve Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and the White House, as well as Senator Baucus and leaders on the Senate HELP Committee.  Senate sources report that both Senator Dodd, who as acting chairman during Sen. Ted Kennedy's illness, led the health care reform effort in committee, and current HELP chairman Tom Harkin (D-IA) will be involved in the merger sessions.

Dodd and Harkin, those sources say, both intend to press for inclusion of the public insurance option plan in the merged and final versions of the Senate bill.  Committee staff note national polls showing that the American people want the option of a public insurance plan, and that leading physicians' groups agree.  The public option included in the HELP Committee's reform bill gives people choices, they note, creates a nationally portable program and puts people ahead of profits.

At a recent gathering of online writers and local bloggers in Connecticut, I had an opportunity to discuss the health care legislative process with Senator Chris Dodd.  Specifically, I raised the idea, originally proposed by David Waldman, to name the public option for Ted Kennedy.

After a lively conversation in which he said "that's a good idea" he went on to discuss some interesting process and jurisdictional points relating to the health care legislation in advance of the expected bill-merging sessions.

Thanks to ctblogger for the video.

At 3:48 of the clip Dodd anticipates some of the factors that may play out in those Senate bill-merging sessions:


"The Committee I was chairing [HELP] has much more jurisdiction over health care than the Finance Committee.  Now, they have the jurisdiction over arguably the difficult parts, dealing with Medicare, Medicaid and (inaudible) and tax policy; but all of the prevention, all of the quality, all of the workforce issues and the coverage questions were legitimate matters of jurisdiction of the HELP Committee."

These jurisdictional arguments will be one of many that, Senate sources say, Dodd and Harkin will use to press for the public option as well as other crucial components from the HELP Committee bill in the merged Senate version.  If they succeed we will have a much better final bill.

You can help them succeed.  Thank Senators Dodd and Harkin and tell them you support their efforts to put the public option in the merged Senate health care bill.

Call Senator Chris Dodd at (202) 224-2823 and
Call Senator Tom Harkin at (202) 224-3254

And join in Wednesday and call your two senators and your representative at 1-877-323-5246 as the AFL-CIO helps lead a National Call-In Day for health care reform.

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tips and thanks to Working America's Main Street blog (4.00 / 2)
for posting this first, for their support and encouragement.

I'm not so sure (0.00 / 0)
I understand the motivation behind naming the Public Option after Ted Kennedy and the hope that it will sway some of the reluctant Democrats in the Senate to support it.  I personally believe, however, that such a move would be more likely to have the reverse effect, if any.

The "Democratic" Senators who oppose the public option have no real policy objection.  Giving them the benefit of the doubt, they probably really could care less one way or the other.  Their stated objection -- that there are not enough votes -- is about as thinly disguisted cynicism as Senators (who are usually Ph.D.'s in hypocrisy) rarely fix on.  It demonstrates a monumental contempt for the voters and an arrogance that comes from people who spend more time checking how their hair is combed than thinking through a policy position.  The contempt part of it explains why Joe Lieberman was an early adopter of this argument.

No I don't think these guys need persuasion either on the merits or by sentiment.  Not one of them could really defend the steaming pile of crap that the Baucus committee is emitting on policy grounds.

These guys are bought, pure and simple.  And if they don't care about their constituents, or their party or the President, then why should the name of Kennedy have any effect on them.  The name must vaguely recall for them Profiles in Courage.  And these guys are so far from seeking an entry in any second volume that their explanation -- that other Senators won't vote for it -- highlights their own cravenness as if for the world to see.

But to the extent that these cowards care one way or the other about the name, Kennedy will surely scare them away from voting for it.  These guys have so debased themselves claiming that they wanted "bipartisanship" when it was evident even to the most casual observer that that was a pipe dream (or excuse) that the name Kennedy will give them yet another reason to cringe.  After all, how could they possibly obtain bipartisan consensus or get the all important Republican vote at the next election or above all avoid the censure of Rush Limbaugh and Fox News if they voted for anything with the name of a dreaded liberal on it.

So I think it's probably not a good idea to affix Kennedy's name to it.  Probably even on the merits it's not wise.  I'm sure that the unhappy compromise to avoid a single payer system was not Kennedy's real dream.  Only some nerdy DLC wonk could get excited over it.  And given how even the HELP committee's bill is a pale vision of universal health care (and will probably get worse in further compromises) I think Kennedy really should be honored with something that actually reflects his life-long fight for social and economic justice.  Not something that's likely to end of being a half-assed sacrifice to get the votes of Senators more interested in gaming the system than achieving any real, lasting improvement in the lives of Americans.


Going in for a spinal fusion on Friday (0.00 / 0)
and I have no idea what the total cost will be. Probably in the thousands.

I'll post occasionally how this plays out financially - but both my husband and myself are employed by companies with group plans - which very few people have.


Public Option name (0.00 / 0)
I faxed Dodd's office months ago, and told him he should name the Public Option Plan, Kennedy Care, or KHIP (Kennedy Health Insurance Plan) or something like that !

I guess it shows that correspondence we send or call into Senator's office never sees the light of the Senator himself!


 
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