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HCR: If GOP Can’t Divide and Conquer, They’ll Stage a Work Slowdown

This, folks, is why Thomas Franks called them the wrecking crew:

Roll Call reports today on what we can expect to see from the Senate GOP caucus as the debate over health care reform enters the final stretch.

Senate Republicans, acknowledging they lack the votes to block a health care reform bill outright, have implemented a comprehensive political strategy to delay, define and derail. [...]

Senate Democrats are rejecting Republicans’ demands to slow things down, charging that the GOP isn’t interested in working with the majority to craft a bipartisan health care bill. Rather, Reid said repeatedly last week, the Republicans’ primary goal is to sink reform in order to undercut President Barack Obama.

It seems safe to say, then, that the Republican strategy for the next several weeks is identical to the strategy of the last several months. As long as the majority appreciates the tactics for what they are, the process will proceed nicely. (In late July, Harry Reid told reporters, “Working with the Republicans, one of the things that they asked for was to have more time. I don’t think it’s unreasonable.” We probably won’t hear that one again.)

Mistakes are the way we learn, right?

Here is some more good news:

As Democratic congressional leaders and White House officials work to shape health care bills that will go to the House and Senate floors, a new Washington Post-ABC News poll shows that support for a government-run health plan to compete with private insurers has rebounded from its summertime lows and now wins clear majority support from the public.

Americans remain sharply divided about both the overall health care package and President Obama’s leadership on the issue, reflecting the intense partisan battle that has raged for months over the administration’s top legislative priority. But majorities now back two key and controversial provisions: both the so-called public option and a new mandate requiring all Americans to carry health insurance.

Independents and senior citizens, two groups crucial to the debate, have warmed to the idea of a public insurance option, and are particularly supportive if it were administered by the states and limited to those without access to affordable private insurance, as stipulated in some versions of the legislation.

The poll is here.

  • AustinRoth
    So, how is this different than the Democrats planning to try and pass health care reform as a rider to another bill, rather than having a direct vote? Seems like typical political maneuvering on both sides to me.
  • JeffersonDavis
    That's rght, Austin. But you must remember.... To a liberal, it's ok if liberals do it. But damned be the GOP for doing it!

    :)
  • JSpencer
    Very simply, if there isn't a public option, then it won't be reform. Who runs this government, the insurance companies?
  • Leonidas
    LOL divide and conquer,,,,. Ummm ,,,the liberals have divided the Democratic party, not the GOP. Divide and self destruct perhaps. If the liberals would join with the majority of the nation in the middle they might pass something, there are enough democratic votes if they move close enough to the center. They dug a moat around themselves filled it with sharks and are complaining that no one will swim over to play with them.
  • Leonidas
    Well, they liberals better move to the center soon, support is dropping again.

    http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/...

    Now that the Senate Finance Committee has passed its version of health care reform, 42% of voters nationwide favor the health care reform plan proposed by President Obama and congressional Democrats. That’s down two points from a week ago and down four from the week before.
  • Don Quijote
    Very simply, if there isn't a public option, then it won't be reform. Who runs this government, the insurance companies?


    Actually, it's Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Bank Of America and a handful of their cronies...
  • DLS
    "To a liberal, it's ok if liberals do it. But damned be the GOP for doing it!"

    And actually, the GOP really isn't. But the libs and Dems have done it, certainly. During the effort a few years ago to rescue Social Security, Bush tried (what would obviously have been eclipsed by Geithner and Obama this year) an investment-related Social Security reform. The Dems, who "own" this program politically, were in the perfect position back then to rescue the program themselves, and probably do better in the next elections, at a time when they were going nowhere. But the Dems simply chose not only to do nothing, but to be a real, _honest_ example of obstructionism, firmly insisting on doing absolutely nothing, opposing any and all changes.

    And they have been stupidly rushing now to do all kinds of goofy things, rather than first reforming Medicare and Social Security, as they (including Obama) have been on record as insisting needs to be done, and that they vow to do soon. (But who other than the obvious would actually believe them?)

    It may be cathartic among some kiddies to dispel their still-present frustration and impatience with the Dems for not continuing to stupidly rush faster than ever to do stupid things, by making all kinds of silly angry charges against the Republicans. But smarter, wiser people continue to question why we should be rushed into making a bad situation almost certainly worse.
  • DLS
    "They dug a moat around themselves filled it with sharks and are complaining that no one will swim over to play with them."

    They set their house on fire, too, and then wail about "obstructionism" when the GOP won't rush to add their gasoline to that the Dems are continuing to spray or wish to spray on that fire.
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