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Finish the Kitchen (Guest Voice)

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WASHINGTON — If President Obama gets to sign a health reform bill, as I believe he will, one reason may be Rep. Jay Inslee’s difficult experience renovating his kitchen.

He told his kitchen story at a House Democratic caucus held after Republican Scott Brown’s victory in Massachusetts sent Inslee’s colleagues into paroxysms of dismay, chaos and fear. Brown’s triumph reduced the Democrats’ majority in the Senate to “only” 59, and this led many in both houses to want to give up on health reform altogether. Even Obama was sounding an uncertain trumpet.

This made no sense to Inslee, a Democrat from Washington state. First elected to the House in 1992, he was swept out of office in the 1994 Republican landslide that followed the collapse of Bill Clinton’s health care efforts. Four years later, Inslee returned to Congress.

“I introduced myself as a fella who was defeated in 1994, the last time we didn’t pass meaningful health care reform,” Inslee recalls saying. “I said it was a painful event, and I didn’t want them to go through that pain.” In politics, he told his colleagues, assuming the “fetal position” can be the most dangerous thing to do.

And then he recounted all the grief he and his family went through while work on their kitchen renovation dragged on and on and on. “During that time, I had bloodlust against my contractor,” Inslee said. “Six months went by, and he was still arguing with the plumber. Eight months went by, and there were still wires hanging down everywhere, and he was having trouble with the building inspector.”

But eventually, the job got done. “And now I love that kitchen,” Inslee recalls saying. “I bake bread in that kitchen. My wife cooks great meals in that kitchen. The contractor’s now a buddy of mine, and I’ve had beers with him in that kitchen.”

Inslee looked at his colleagues and declared: “We’ve got to finish the kitchen.” His point was that Americans won’t experience any of the benefits of health care reform until Congress actually puts a new system in place.

I called Inslee about his kitchen oration after Rep. David Wu, D-Ore., told me it was one of the turning points in calming Democrats’ nerves. “Now,” Wu says, “people run into him in the hallway, smile and say, ‘Finish the kitchen.’”

There is only one plausible way to finish the kitchen.

The House needs to pass the Senate bill and both chambers need to approve amendments to it. At least two amendments are essential to getting the bill through the House. They involve reducing the burden of the tax on so-called Cadillac health care plans, which is wildly unpopular with House members and voters; and getting rid of the special Medicaid subsidy deal for Nebraska, which just about everyone hates. Even Nebraska’s Ben Nelson, the senator for whom that deal was put together, wants it out.

The House and Senate disagree over the order in which these things should be done, but they can resolve this. The real problem is that some Senate Democratic moderates are petrified that Republicans will make terrible trouble if the amendments are passed through the “reconciliation process,” which is fancy congressional talk for majority rule. Reconciliation bills require a simple majority of the Senate, not the 60 votes that, wrongly, have come to be necessary to get any bill through.

But if Democrats are that intimidated by Republicans, they should just give up their majority. And this fear is politically shortsighted. Right now, every Democrat in the Senate has to defend a vote for the health care bill anyway, with nothing to show for it — and this includes defending the Nebraska deal.

By contrast, voting for amendments to the original Senate bill would be a sign that Democrats heard the message from Massachusetts. Brown won in part because the Nebraska buy-off became a symbol of unseemly legislative logrolling. And many voters would welcome a reduction in a tax on health plans.

Moreover, as Inslee points out, if democracy’s new rule is that nothing gets done without 60 percent of the available votes, Scott Brown, who got 52 percent in Massachusetts, would not be sitting in the Senate.

Democrats can finish the kitchen. Or they can face the wrath of voters who will wonder why the contractors they sent to Washington left all the wires hanging, and the plumbing disconnected and useless.

This copyrighted column is licensed to run on TMV in full. (c) 2010, Washington Post Writers Group



9 Responses to “Finish the Kitchen (Guest Voice)”

  1. DaMav says:

    This will make a great explanation to the American people as to why the Democrats used an end run to ram through a bill that most Americans do not want to see passed. A bill that independent voters in Massachusetts swarmed to the polls in record numbers to block. A bill that everyone knows will raise taxes, destroy existing doctor/patient relationships, cut Medicare benefits to millions, and that contains all manner of privately cut backroom deals.

    'We did it to finish the kitchen.'

    And these bozos accuse Palin of oversimplifying the issues.

  2. shannonlee says:

    Great article. Sounds like someone found a way to rally the team and win won for the gipper.

    I like my public healthcare. It is great not having an insurance company between myself and life saving medicine or surgery.

    Did I also mention it't cheaper than what I was paying in the US?

  3. It's come to a point where a good reason to pass a bill is that the American lumpen disapprove of it. Democracy always dances poorly with meritocracy. In America, democracy has become the enemy of the nation.

  4. DaGoat says:

    I guess the message is that even though the contractors (Obama, Reid and Pelosi in this case) are incompetent it's still worth sticking to the plan and “finishing the kitchen”. The problem is incompetent contractors tend to do a poor job overall and not just take a long time completing the project.

    If my kitchen was still a disaster after six months I'd be looking to fire the original contractor, something that is being reflected in the declining job approval of Obama and the Democrats.

  5. If you think the other contractor option is a better one, then you might be unfit to have a kitchen in the first place.

  6. DLS says:

    “'We did it to finish the kitchen.'”

    [snicker]

    Don't Ask, Don't Tell and other sops — “Dessert Before Spinach”

    [snicker]

  7. DaGoat says:

    If you think the other contractor option is a better one, then you might be unfit to have a kitchen in the first place.

    Hmm. If my only choice was between two bad contractors I'd keep the kitchen I had or do the work myself.

    If you mean that the American people are unfit to have a decent health care system because all they have to choose between is two lousy parties, there is some merit to that.

  8. DLS says:

    Libs wouldn't like to see an honest writeup of these Dem “contractors” on Angie's List.

  9. Father_Time says:

    A voters “wrath” ? For whom will they vote…republicans? lol

    Republicans will never pass a healthcare reform bill. They don't want any “healthcare reform”.

    If they did, they would have brought up their own bill sometime between 1994 and now!

    Voters wrath? You mean cut off nose to despite face?

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