Nelson Sells Out, Putting Victory Within Reach For Obama(S)care

December 19th, 2009 (13) Posted By Erik Wong.

bill-nelson-speakig

WASHINGTON (AP) – Senate Democrats appear within reach of the 60 votes necessary to pass President Barack Obama’s health care legislation after a long year of struggle and a final burst of deadline bargaining with holdout Sen. Ben Nelson of Nebraska.

Emerging from marathon talks with Majority Leader Harry Reid and White House officials late Friday night, Nelson said “real progress” had been made toward his call for greater restrictions on abortion within the legislation.

Majority Leader Harry Reid decided to go public a final package of changes in the long-debated legislation on Saturday “and is confident that it will prevail,” his spokesman, Jim Manley, said in a late-night statement.

Reid made no comment to reporters, but Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., another participant in the talks, sounded pleased. “I’ve been in Harry Reid’s office for 13 hours and I’m glad to get out of there,” he said. “But I’m particularly glad with what has happened in that office.”

With Nelson’s vote, Obama’s Senate allies would have the 60 needed to overcome a filibuster by Republicans.

That gave Nelson enormous leverage as he pressed for concessions that included stronger restrictions on abortions to be covered by insurance policies offered in a newly overhauled health care system. Officials said he was also seeking to ease the impact of a proposed insurance industry tax on nonprofit companies, as well as win more federal funds to cover Nebraska’s cost of treating patients in Medicaid, the state-federal health care program for the poor. These officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks, said the administration and Democratic leaders had offered concessions on those points.

The Nebraska Democrat has already rejected one proposed offer on abortions as insufficient, and the presence in the talks of Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., indicated additional changes were on the table.

Boxer has a strong record in favor of abortion rights. She told reporters as she left the Capitol at the end of the evening there had been progress made on the issue of separating personal funds, which may be used to pay for abortions, from federal funds, which may not.

The issue is contentious because the legislation provides federal subsidies to help lower and middle-income families afford insurance and the other federal health care programs ban the use of government money to pay for abortions.

Obama devoted his weekend radio and Internet address to the issue he campaigned on in 2008.

“Now – for the first time – there is a clear majority in the Senate that’s willing to stand up to the insurance lobby and embrace lasting health insurance reforms that have eluded us for generations,” Obama said. “Let’s bring this long and vigorous debate to an end.”

“As this difficult year comes to a close, let’s show the American people that we are equal to the task of meeting our great challenges,” he said.

In the Republican response, Sen. John McCain warned that rushing through legislation now would do more harm than good.

“The best thing government could do to ensure more Americans have access to health care insurance is to institute reforms that would rein in costs and make health care more affordable,” said McCain, R-Ariz. “Regrettably, there’s nothing in this legislation that effectively addresses the problem.”

In an article she wrote in Saturday’s Washington Post, Vicki Kennedy, the widow of Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., said that while the Senate bill is imperfect, it would achieve many of the goals her husband fought for over four decades.

“I humbly ask his colleagues to finish the work of his life, the work of generations, to allow the vote to go forward and to pass health care reform now. As Ted always said, when it’s finally done, the people will wonder what took so long,” she said.

The legislation would expand coverage to 30 million people now uninsured and try to curb rising health care costs. Insurance companies would be prohibited from denying coverage to people with health problems, or charging them more. All Americans would be required to have health insurance, or eventually face fines. The nearly $1 trillion, 10-year cost would be paid for mainly with Medicare cuts and new taxes on insurance companies and other parts of the health care industry.

The week saw an intraparty brawl among Democrats, with liberals seething over the compromises Reid has already made to keep the bill moving.

Gone is a government insurance plan modeled on Medicare. So is the fallback, the option of allowing aging baby boomers to buy into Medicare. The major benefits of the bill won’t start for three or four years, and then they’ll be delivered through private insurance companies.

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  • nospyme

    The photo you’ve posted is the FLORIDA Nelson, not the Nebraska Nelson….

  • Tom in CO

    “I work hard for the money!” is his reelection theme song :roll:

  • http://none WWTD

    Big fuck stick too.

  • March

    That dude is CREEPY looking.

    He’s got the whole televangelist thing going on.

  • uclimbit

    Typical America hating sell out.

  • The Sentinel at the Gate

    And here’s to some of them’s political careers being over after the 2010 midterms. I wish nothing but bad things for all the “blue dog(shits)” that sold their souls to Satan for this Communist bill. May they burn in Hell for ever!

  • http://mailboxawnings.com Marka in the Keys

    On to Washington DC April 15 Tax Day March! All who went to the 9/12 march will bring another new marcher and we will see 3 to 4 million protest this government and this president. Anger and frustration are real.

  • CPLViper

    See you there … were you at the first one?

  • Fishman

    Walking shoulder to shoulder with ya…#2,687,908!

  • GRIZZ

    GEE,that will really show em.
    And we will have signs,and wear patriotic t- shirts.
    We can sing the natl anthem,and tha star spangled banner.
    And then to really show that we mean business,we will write letters and make phone calls to all our senators?????????????????????????????????????????????? :shock:

    see where i am going with this

  • Bobby E

    As I’ve been saying … there is not ONE politician currently ‘presiding’ over us that doesn’t need to be ousted. Every damn one of them are lying to the American people to further an illegitimate agenda. You back who you want … I prefer they all be shot.

  • BoomBoom

    My God hold Nelson accountable for each of the babies that are murdered for his gain.

  • CPLViper

    I hear you Grizz but consider those large scale meetings. Attend them and don’t be shy … meet and greet, distribute materials or a business card … just make contacts with like minded people. See where I am going with this? Get the names of all the different organizations … then … call all of them together.