Editore"s Note
Tilting at Windmills

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September 22, 2009

SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE GETS TO WORK.... It's several months later than expected, but the Senate Finance Committee will get together this morning and start actually doing the heavy lifting on crafting a health care reform bill.

To help grease the skids, Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) made some improvements to his bill late yesterday, in the hopes of securing additional support from Democrats who'd been locked out of Baucus-led negotiations all summer.

The chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Max Baucus, said Monday that he would modify his health care bill to provide more assistance to moderate-income Americans to help them buy insurance. Mr. Baucus also said he would make changes to reduce the impact of a proposed tax on high-end health insurance policies. [...]

Mr. Baucus said he believed the changes would "help smooth the way for passage" of the bill in the Finance Committee, where he will try to navigate through critics on the left and the right.

The devil, of course, is still in the details, but Baucus at least seems like he's moving in the right direction. He didn't say specifically how much he would, for example, improve subsidy levels for the middle class, but Baucus conceded the subsidies "will clearly be more generous." The NYT added, "He said he wanted to reduce the maximum amount that moderate-income Americans would have to pay in premiums under the legislation to less than 12 percent of income." Baucus' framework from last week eyed 13%, which suggests his improvement is slight, but progress is progress.

Baucus still isn't going for a public option, though he expressed renewed interest yesterday in the Snowe "trigger" idea. Baucus also signaled a willingness to reduce penalties for those who refuse to get insurance.

Time's Karen Tumulty had a helpful overview of what to look out for as the Finance Committee rolls up its sleeves on Baucus' proposal: "It faces hundreds of amendments, promising a tug of war between the left and the right that will be the best test yet of whether this legislation has any chance of ever reaching the President's desk."

Tumulty added that Baucus is "moving with uncharacteristic speed." In terms of the calendar, that's heartening -- the chairman thinks it's possible an amended version of the reform bill could be approved as early as this week. At that point, the Senate leadership would begin merging it with the Senate HELP bill that passed in July.

A spokesperson for the Senate Majority Leader said a bill could be on the Senate floor in early October. In other words, in just two weeks, for the first time in history, the Senate could be debating a health care reform bill.

Steve Benen 8:00 AM Permalink | Trackbacks | Comments (8)
 
Comments

The publishing of Jungs red book and Baucus acting as if he were a living creature , coincidence ? We report you decide .

Posted by: FRP on September 22, 2009 at 8:01 AM | PERMALINK

The Republicans will do everything they possibly can to delay this. It's not over yet

Posted by: Polaris on September 22, 2009 at 8:17 AM | PERMALINK

We'll need to appoint a "trigger czar"... to ascertain specific trigger-pulling criteria, and to ensure that it is actually pulled when (if) the criteria are met.

Posted by: Jim G on September 22, 2009 at 8:49 AM | PERMALINK

I believe another issue in the Baucus bill that SHOULD BE CHANGED permits insurers dealing with Insurance Exchange subscribers to charge 5 times more for older insureds than lowest age class.
That ratio should be 2 to 1 not 5 to 1.
THIS BILL is an Insurance Industry WISH LIST.
This bill could create a situation WORSE than current mess !
Looking for Progressive Dems to step up !

Posted by: ParityFanatic on September 22, 2009 at 9:13 AM | PERMALINK

Tumulty added that Baucus is "moving with uncharacteristic speed."

He's gone from glacial to merely sloth-like. It will be interesting to see which insurance company he goes to work for after he retires from the Senate.

Posted by: josef on September 22, 2009 at 9:22 AM | PERMALINK

This bill could have been out of committee a month ago if Reid had put the screws to Baucus. Better yet, he could have given Baucus the finger and proceeded without him.

Yet another fuck-up to add to Reid's long list.

Posted by: bdop4 on September 22, 2009 at 9:36 AM | PERMALINK

The fastest , most efficient way to ammend the finance helath care deform bill is to scrap it and just follow the HELP bill. Baucus continues the debauchery of the American people by supoorting the insurance compoanies and providing subsidies to the insurance companies; there is no interest in americans at all. Why not make it simple. Medicare for all with supplemental insurance to cover what M'care does not pay. Simple, afordable and it keeps the insurance viable. May be not with the profits as before but viable. Congress makes the health care reform complex to provide smoke and mirrors to prevent Americans from really knowing how our politicians have yet duped Americans again.

Posted by: MlJohnston on September 22, 2009 at 10:03 AM | PERMALINK

How the hell are uninsured Americans (all 47 million of them) not supposed to notice that the government raised their "taxes" by 12%? For a policy that they can't even afford to use.

If this is passes there will be a Dem blood bath in the mids....

Posted by: marku on September 22, 2009 at 10:30 AM | PERMALINK
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