March 19, 2010 8:20 AM

Steny Hoyer: Health Vote Won't Cost Us in Nov.

By
David Morgan
Topics
Health Care ,
Democrats ,
Congress

health care (Credit: CBS)
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said he is confident that a vote for the health reform bill will not cost Democrats in November.

On this morning's "Early Show" Hoyer touted recent polls by the Wall Street Journal and the Economist indicating Americans support what is in the bill (48%-45% and 53%-47%, respectively).

"When you go to the individual specific provisions in this bill — eliminating pre-existing conditions from being a preclusion to getting insurance, making sure that companies can't put lifetime caps or cancel your policies when you get really sick, making sure that annually you can't be capped so you drive families into bankruptcy — when you ask people about that, and about the exchanges where you have a transparent marketplace, where you can compare prices and benefits through whole range of insurance companies so you can get the best buy, people say 60%, 70%, 80%, 'Yes, those are good provisions.'

"So I'm very confident that when this bill is passed and people review what it will do for them, their families, small businesses, and the deficit reduction, I think they'll say this is a good policy for our country," Hoyer said.

Hoyer was pleased that the Congressional Budget office's breakdown of the bill's costs and benefits — which shows the legislation would reduce the federal deficit — would appeal not only to the public but to fiscally conservative Congressional members whose support has not been already won. A vote is expected in the House this Sunday.

CBSNews.com Special Report: Health Care Reform

He said the CBO report confirms "We are doing exactly what we said we would do, and that is adopting a program which will make health care more affordable, make insurance companies accountable, and bring down the deficit over $1.3 trillion over the next two decades. All those items are important to our Members.

"We think Members will conclude by Sunday that this is the bill that does what we said we would do, and they'll pass it."

In extolling the virtues of the bill, the top Democrat went so far as to quote Sen. John McCain, who during the 2008 campaign said that every American should have access to quality and affordable coverage of their choice — even though the Arizona Republican sent out a message to supporters yesterday stating, "We must do everything in our power to defeat this bill from becoming law."

That may still happen, given that Democrats need about 10 House members to assure passage. And there is lingering criticism over special provisions in the bill for certain states, which were to have been excluded in the most recent write-up but have survived, such as extra money for hospitals in Tennessee that serve large numbers of low-income patients.

"Speaker Pelosi went to great pains yesterday to say that this [bill] does have equality for all states now," "Early Show" anchor Maggie Rodriguez said. "There's still special spending in as many as 11 other states. What happened to the equality for all states in this bill?"

"Clearly there are provisions in the bill which take care of special circumstances," Hoyer replied. "Speaker Pelosi has said the Nebraska 'Cornhusker Provision'" — $100 million in Medicaid funds that Sen. Ben Nelson had won for his state — "was, in fact, taken out of this bill because that was clearly just targeted. And what we have done is treat all states equally in terms of federal contribution towards Medicaid payments over the coming years. So I think this bill treats all people and all states equally. Are there special provisions in there which deal with certain situations? There are, but those situations are unique."

More Coverage of the Health Care Reform Debate:

The Hunt for Health Care Votes: Democrats to Watch
Obama Deploys Personal Presidential Touch
Dem Health Care Bill Pegged at $940B Over 10 Years
Washington Unplugged: Nancy Cordes on the Final Countdown
Dueling News Conferences
Obama Cancels Foreign Trip for Health Care Push
Pelosi: Health Care Bill "Best Initiative" for the Economy
GOP Plots Ways to Fight Health Care
Obama's Health Care Plan: What Do You Think?
CBSNews.com Special Report: Health Care


  • David Morgan

    David Morgan is a senior editor at CBSNews.com and cbssundaymorning.com.

Add a Comment
by jgg000101 March 19, 2010 1:30 PM EDT
for hoyer to even address this issue tells me he's scared to death of it happening and is trying to put on a brave face to swing votes to his side.
Reply to this comment
by gboyd41 March 19, 2010 1:24 PM EDT
Hoyer, what planet are you broadcasting from?
Reply to this comment
by sjc_1 March 20, 2010 2:34 PM EDT
We will see...some people may want their representatives to stand for something and to show some courage. I keep hearing the GOP talk about what the American people want, as if they truly know. Our Representative is Republican who votes along straight Party lines. I have never seen this person come to talk with any of the 250,000 people near me.
by tsigili March 19, 2010 10:33 AM EDT
If you really believe that, you are a bigger fool than you appear.

My wrath, and the wrath of many more like me, will come to haunt you, in November.
Reply to this comment
by blondenblueeyed March 19, 2010 10:25 AM EDT
Hey Steny....wanna bet this health care bill won't cost Dems in Nov?
Just sit back and watch and keep drinking your kool-aide!
Reply to this comment
by stn_sage March 19, 2010 10:13 AM EDT
I think it's going to cost BOTH parties! The Republicans blatantly REFUSED to cooperate and come up with any meaningful deal! They said, 'NO'! from the beginning, then whined because THEY couldn't control the agenda (refusing to believe they ARE the minority party and don't have the right), then offered proposals to derail it, then threatened to filibuster it, and finally, said, 'hey, let's just start ALL OVER!'

And, the Democrats will pay because they stupidly failed to unite their party from the beginning behind the bill, then allowed all the stupid bill-killing tactics of the Republicans, then allowed a couple of individual prima donnas to slow things down, then betrayed the public by
failing to include what the majority wanted to begin with...the public option...and now want to put up a POS bill and pretend it's a good one!

Yeah, I think they're both going to lose some incumbents, and they SHOULD!
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