AP/ January 7, 2010, 4:39 AM

Pelosi: Congress Very Close on Health Bill

The House and Senate are "very close" to finalizing historic legislation revamping the nation's health care system, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Wednesday after she and other Democratic leaders met with President Barack Obama at the White House.

Pelosi's optimistic prediction came after days of frantic work by staff members, lawmakers and the president himself to iron out the differences between sweeping bills passed by the House and Senate before Christmas. Obama wants final legislation on his desk in time for his State of the Union address early next month, and Democratic leaders are rushing to deliver despite the numerous discrepancies between the bills.

Obama is taking a more direct role than ever, convening Oval Office meetings Tuesday and Wednesday of House Democratic leaders, who have to compromise the most so that Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., can get a bill through the Senate with his fragile 60-vote majority.

Pelosi, D-Calif., was enthusiastic after emerging from the White House late Wednesday afternoon with the chairs of four key committees.

"We've had a very intense couple of days," Pelosi said. "After our leadership meeting this morning, our staff engaged with the Senate and the administration staff to review the legislation, suggest legislative language. I think we're very close to reconciliation."

House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif., said the House would like to pass a bill by the end of this month.

Under a fast-track process worked out with Obama, lawmakers are bypassing the usual negotiations between the two chambers in the interest of speed, and the House will work off the Senate's version, amend it and send it back to the Senate for final passage.

The bills passed by the House and Senate both would require nearly all Americans to get coverage and would provide subsidies for many who can't afford the cost, but they differ on hundreds of details. Among them are whom to tax, how many people to cover, how to restrict taxpayer funding for abortion and whether illegal immigrants should be allowed to buy coverage in the new markets with their own money.

The House bill tops $1 trillion over 10 years while the Senate bill is cheaper.

House Democrats are reluctant to abandon elements of their legislation favored by liberals but rejected by Senate moderates, but face doing just that. That means no new government insurance plan, which the House wanted but the Senate omitted, and changes to the House's preferred payment scheme. The House wants to raise income taxes on individuals making more than $500,000 and couples over $1 million. The Senate would slap a new tax on high-cost insurance plans. Although the Obama administration supports the Senate's insurance tax as a cost-saver, labor unions, which contribute heavily to Democratic candidates, oppose it.

The House is looking at accepting the insurance tax if it hits fewer people than the Senate's design now calls for. And in place of a new government insurance plan House Democrats are working on stronger affordability measures for middle- and lower-income people, something Obama has agreed to help them with.

"What we're talking about is affordability and accountability, and I think in both of the bills are the makings of great legislation," Pelosi said. "It's not a question of adopting this or that. It's about addressing the needs of the American people."

House members also wants the Senate to agree to revoking insurers' antitrust exemption as a way to hold insurance companies accountable in absence of direct competition.

A conference call of the full House Democratic caucus is scheduled for Thursday.

In California, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who in October praised Obama's efforts toward reforming health care, delivered a stinging indictment of the legislation.

"Health care reform, which started as noble and needed legislation, has become a trough of bribes, deals and loopholes," Schwarzenegger said in his State of the State address in Sacramento. "You've heard of the bridge to nowhere. This is health care to nowhere."

Schwarzenegger urged California lawmakers to vote against the bill unless they can negotiate a special deal to get more Medicaid money, as did key centrist Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., for his state.
© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
15 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
msjb1 says:
THE BIG THREE used to be our great automobile business, now with the change let me present the new big three, O-man, Nancy, Harry, one thing about them you can always tell when they are lying cause their lips will be moving.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
stormerF2 says:
The title should be Democrats are very close to a closed door health bill.With out the Tax Payers knowledge of what is taking place to get to a final bill.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
edgy44 says:
This legislation, like the secret "manhattan project," will be nothing but another A-bomb. When they write about the fall of America, Obama will be as prominant as Caligula. The only thing left, at this stage, is a claim of divinity.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
mnbrant says:
I am really looking forward to this. Even without a public option, if you become very sick or unemployed these days, your health care stops. I was talking to a homeless man the other day and the thing on his mind was something they call un-allotment. Basically it means the general assistance medical will be discontinued on March in MN. I thought to myself who is going to pay for it now? As is stands now, hospitals cannot dump people in the street for not being able to pay. Are new laws going to be enacted to allow this? I suppose we could jail the non-payers. Who's going to pay for that? What about the hippocratic oath? Is it now obsolete? I have to thank Pelosi and all the politicians for not going back on their pledge to fix some of this mess.
reply
sjc_1 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
This is the only country where health care is a for profit greed pit. It started as nuns working in hospitals taking care of the sick and has turned into a $2.5 TRILLION dollar money machine for the greedy. Totally immoral and shameful.
NacilbuperLives replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Hey SJC, can you tell me why people come from Canada and England to America for serious health care?
linkicon reporticon emailicon
ky7474 says:
This Health Care Bill process is showing us all how ugly politics have become. Many are screaming about the Constitution as though it had'nt been trampled on for years. Then the ones doing the screaming don't realize they break the Constitution when they support prohibition's on large segments of tax psying Americans. The real Constitution covers us all.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
jschmidt27 says:
All they'll have to do is pay of the senators with donations for their states. They don't care that this bill will bankrupt our country as no govt program has ever reduced waste or come in at the expected budget. The Dems will pay dearly for this bill.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
CBSisCommunist2 says:
The "lie " bill
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
NacilbuperLives says:
WASHINGTON ? President Barack Obama signaled to House Democratic leaders Wednesday that they'll have to drop their opposition to taxing high-end health insurance plans to pay for health coverage for millions of uninsured Americans.

In a meeting at the White House, Obama expressed his preference for the insurance tax contained in the Senate's health overhaul bill, but largely opposed by House Democrats and organized labor, Democratic aides said. The aides spoke on condition of anonymity because the meeting was private.

House Democrats want to raise income taxes on high-income individuals instead and are reluctant to abandon that approach, while recognizing that they will have to bend on that and other issues so that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., can maintain his fragile 60-vote majority support for the bill.

Hey, how many remember McCain talking about this, hmm now what did Obama have to say about that?

Oh, here it is, see for yourself.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7l8ZOMd468o
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
markj2 says:
Thats ok Nancy, but how many of the state Senators are actually going to vote yes on this UnConstitutional made in secret Health Scare Bill. Remember alot went home for the Christmas holidays and probably faced alot of unhappy voters, who told them you vote YES and we will vote NO for your re-election. Now if they don't care about political suicide then they will Vote Yes, but if they want to continue on in Congress they will listen to the majority of the American People.
reply
gboyd41 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
markj2-they appear not to care. That is freightening. What is going on?
See all 15 Comments
Scroll Left Scroll Right