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House Health Care Bill Vote, Completes Package: Fixes Pass By 220-207

Congress

DAVID ESPO   03/26/10 12:37 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Capping an epic struggle, congressional Democrats put the final touches Thursday to historic legislation enshrining health care as the right of every citizen. Republicans vowed to campaign for repeal in the fall election season, drawing a quick retort from President Barack Obama: "I welcome that fight."

The president spoke in Iowa as the Senate voted 56-43 for legislation making changes, including better benefits for seniors and low-income and middle-class families, to the bill he signed into law with a flourish at the White House on Tuesday.

The House added its approval a few hours later, 220-207, clearing the way for Obama's signature on the second of two bills that marked the culmination of what the president called "a year of debate and a century of trying" to ensure coverage for nearly all in a nation where millions lack it. Obama is expected to sign the legislation early next week.

Taken together, the two bills also aim to crack down on insurance industry abuses and to reduce federal deficits by an estimated $143 billion over a decade. Most Americans would be required to buy insurance for the first time, and face penalties if they refused.

The second of the two bills also presented Obama with another victory, stripping banks and other private lenders of their ability to originate student loans in favor of a system of direct government lending.

After a monthslong battle in Congress, the political struggle was morphing into a new phase, where public debate was tinged with violence – and politicians accused one another of seeking to exploit it for their own advantage.

Apart from their impact on nearly every American and an estimated one-sixth of the American economy, the week's events marked Obama's biggest political triumphs since he took office more than a year ago. A pending arms control agreement with Russia, announced on Wednesday, added to his resume, and White House officials said they hoped the momentum would translate into further political successes in the run-up to the midterm elections.

More than 10 lawmakers in the House said they had received threats or worse as a consequence of the health care debate, most of them Democrats who voted in favor of the legislation. There were reports of bricks through windows, a cut propane line to a grill and numerous obscene and threatening phone calls and faxes. An undisclosed number of lawmakers were under increased police protection.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and the GOP leader, Rep. John Boehner of Ohio, both denounced the threats and incidents of violence. But Democrats said Republicans had been too slow to respond, drawing an outraged response in return.

"By ratcheting up the rhetoric, some will only inflame these situations to dangerous levels," said Republican Whip Eric Cantor of Virginia. "Enough is enough. It has to stop."

An aide to Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, head of the Democratic 2010 campaign effort, responded: "This is straight out of the Republicans' political playbook of deflecting responsibility and distracting attention away from a serious issue."

"Repeal and replace" was the new slogan for Republicans as they pivoted away from earlier attempts to kill the health care legislation. Officials said it was meant to appeal to tea party activists – who staged an occasionally unruly demonstration outside the Capitol over the weekend – as well as to independent voters eager for changes in the health care system but fearful the Democrats went too far.

"Republicans fought on behalf of the American people this week and will continue to fight until this bill is repealed and replaced with commonsense ideas that solve our problems without dismantling the health care system we have and without burying the American dream under a mountain of debt," said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky.

Repeal was far-fetched in the extreme since Republicans are now deep in the minority in both houses and would need a two-thirds majority to overcome a certain veto by Obama.

But Republicans circulated polls showing public backing for the overhaul at no better than 40 percent, despite months of Democratic efforts to rally support. Attacking the bill as a government takeover of health care paid for in higher taxes and Medicare cuts, they taunted House Democrats who voted for it, saying those lawmakers had cleared the way for their own defeat this fall.

Democrats said any unease was the result of months of Republican distractions – as far back as last summer's debunked charges of "death panels" – and predicted the public would warm to the new law once its first benefits take effect.

That was Obama's pitch in Iowa, where he trumpeted a "set of reforms" that will take effect before the elections.

He said small businesses would be eligible for tax credits to help them cover the cost of insurance for employees, including a $250 rebate from the government for seniors with high prescription drug costs.

"This year, insurance companies will no longer be able to drop people's coverage when they get sick, or place lifetime limits or restrictive annual limits on the amount of care they can receive," he said.

"This is the reform that some folks in Washington are still hollering about. And now that it's passed, they're already promising to repeal it. ... Well, I say go for it," he said.

Senate passage of the follow-up measure was nearly along party lines. Democratic Sens. Blanche Lincoln and Mark Pryor of Arkansas and Ben Nelson of Nebraska joined 39 Republicans in opposing the legislation. Republican Johnny Isakson of Georgia, who is hospitalized, did not vote.

The House vote followed the same pattern, with 32 Democrats joining 175 Republicans in opposition.

Democrats had hoped the Senate's vote would end their yearlong campaign to overhaul the health care system. But Republicans forced the deletion of two minor student loan-related provisions, and that required a revote in the House.

The day's events marked the final stages of a rescue mission that Obama and Democratic leaders mounted more than two months ago, after Republicans unexpectedly won a Massachusetts Senate seat and with it, the ability to slow final action on health care legislation.

Under a revised strategy, the House agreed to approve a Senate-passed bill despite numerous objections, on the condition that both houses would follow quickly with a fix-it measure. The one finally brought to a vote on Thursday added more than $20 billion to subsidies for lower- and middle-income individuals and families who will be required to purchase insurance and about $8 billion over a decade for states that already provide more generous than average Medicaid benefits.

The Senate vote took place with Vice President Joe Biden presiding, a symbolic gesture since his vote was not needed.

Moments before approving the legislation, the Senate paused for a moment of silence in memory of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts, who died last year after a career of more than 45 years in which he relentlessly pursued legislation to enact national health care.

___

Associated Press writers Alan Fram, Erica Werner, Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, Jim Abrams and Laurie Kellman contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — Capping an epic struggle, congressional Democrats put the final touches Thursday to historic legislation enshrining health care as the right of every citizen. Republicans vowed to c...
WASHINGTON — Capping an epic struggle, congressional Democrats put the final touches Thursday to historic legislation enshrining health care as the right of every citizen. Republicans vowed to c...
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01:59 PM on 03/26/2010
It's coming. And soon we'll see--no "armageddon".
04:00 PM on 03/26/2010
No, we'll see increases in rates, continual decreases in level of care, and the insistence from the Washington political establishments that they've fixed everything and "move on, nothing to see here."
01:15 PM on 03/26/2010
As I look around under this bus, and try to find enough crumbs to make half a loaf, I've decided to save my pennies and stop giving time to Democrats. I'm one of the over-informed, who actually read the bill.

The meaningful cost controls - drug reimportation, Medicare direct drug-price reumbursement, public option, a central provider reimbursement negotiator - not in the bill.

Consumer protections sounded good, but left up enforcement up to the states and the states didn't enforce the consumer protections we had before.

And there wasn't any competition - the anti-trust waiver stayed, no public option, no national exchanges.

Those mandates Candidate Obama campaigned against were there. Those taxes on employee benefits that Candidate Obama campaigned against were there. "If mandates were the solution, we could end homelessness by mandating that everyone buy a house.."

I was completely blindsided by getting an individual mandate that forces women to buy insurance, but also prevents them from getting insurance that covers a legal medical procedure. Obama had campaigned against Hyde, and Democrats are the "pro-choice party".

And the consequences of mandating 30 million people buy insurance seemed totally disregarded. With the billions in premiums insurers would get, why would they not spend it to lobby to make sure those customers never got greater competition or enforcement of regulation? Especially after Citizens United.

But what about the children?

Uh-oh. About the kids: http://www.kaiserhealthnews.org/Stories/2010/March/24/sick-kids-coverage.aspx
02:02 PM on 03/26/2010
Are you SURE you read the bill? Are you SURE you understood it?
03:59 PM on 03/26/2010
Did you find any of those things in there? The cost controls? The competition? Robust enforcement of regulations? Please point out the sections in question, and I'll point out the loopholes.
correctingerrors
Real micro-bio censored by HuffPost, as usual
10:39 PM on 03/25/2010
Done - 2 days ahead of schedule. The Repubs made it sound like this was going to be the mother of all Senate fights. Boy, that was one of the shorter thing done there in 14 months.

Fizzle, Fizzle, DONE!
10:28 PM on 03/25/2010
I seem to have a knack of tuning into CSPAN two minutes before the voting finishes.

It was quite tense, when at 0:00 on the clock , the AYE's were at 210....

Then the shout out came when someone asked if Grayson was voting.. Thought it pretty ironic I thought he might even vote a NAY just to wind the opposition up.

SM
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choot
I'm keeping the hope AND the change
10:25 PM on 03/25/2010
Hopey-Changey GOOD.
BIG JOHN
I'm not concerned with poor people?
11:09 PM on 03/25/2010
Hopey, changey, you can believe in.
Blitzschnell
Left-leaning limericks, ballads and prose
10:17 PM on 03/25/2010
GOP agenda, 2010--2016.

Reducing unemployment--Propose a constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman.

Job creation--Propose a constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman.

Immigration--Propose a constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman.

Deficit reduction--Propose a constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman.

Education reform--Propose a constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman.

Global climate change--Propose a constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman.

Oh, and extend the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy and deregulate everything, of course
11:44 PM on 03/25/2010
Fanned.
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retrievals
TAX CUTS = JOBS = BIG FAT LIE
10:15 PM on 03/25/2010
Repugs how's that hopey changey thing with a side of Waterloo doing for you?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
underoath
Crank up the crazy and rip off the knob !!
10:14 PM on 03/25/2010
Finally HCR emerges victorious
01:52 PM on 03/26/2010
-2,000 rallies and vigils attended by 150,000 people
-Hundreds of face-to-face meetings with members of Congress
-7,813,682 petition signatures, 595,522 phone calls, and 948,705 faxes
-150 MoveOn Councils running powerful local campaigns in 44 states
-50,000 small-business leaders, doctors, nurses, and other medical professionals supporting reform
-1,124,457 (!!!) messages in one day during the Virtual March for Real Health Care Reform
-$9.4 million raised for our campaign, and $5.6 million more pledged to support progressive primary challengers
-Dozens of ads featuring Heather Graham, REM, and MoveOn members like Janet Jacobson and Dawn Smith
-More than 3,000 news stories about your work!

You never gave up. Not after the debate dragged on for months. Not after the Right declared health care dead. Not after corporate Democrats skewered the public option. And not after Massachusetts, when too many Democrats wanted to throw in the towel.

This is our victory.
Blitzschnell
Left-leaning limericks, ballads and prose
10:09 PM on 03/25/2010
Let the Republican Pity Party begin in earnest!

Cry Baby/Janis Joplin
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JjD4eWEUgMM

Crying Game/Boy George
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oOgv-UuTgac

Crying Over You/k.d. lang, Roy Orbison
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EKcQ0-Yel8A

Cry Me a River/Justin Timberlake
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Idh1yr1SJNA

And for those Republicans hoping for repeal:

What a Fool Believes/Doobie Brothers
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2VZ5DfCY6kY
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MaxxMahOnline
Author, Professional Writer, Independent Publisher
10:13 PM on 03/25/2010
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! LMAOF!!!!!!!! THAT IS TOO FUNNY! I AM GIDDY, I'M SO HAPPY! YEAH MAN! YES WE CAN, AND YES WE DID, AND YES WE WILL DO IT AGAIN! ROCK ON DEMS!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CabinAgue
We are ALL in this together.
10:21 PM on 03/25/2010
You need to take some slow, deep breaths.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AllShookUp
Hug A Hater
10:14 PM on 03/25/2010
Excellent! Fanned!
10:07 PM on 03/25/2010
The GOP faces "tow-up". Left dazed and confused.
10:07 PM on 03/25/2010
It must be great for America... Castro loves it...
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choot
I'm keeping the hope AND the change
10:22 PM on 03/25/2010
Kleenex?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CabinAgue
We are ALL in this together.
10:23 PM on 03/25/2010
So you judge our country based on what cr@zy people think? Well, OBL is not happy with Obama -- so Obama must be doing great then, eh?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chancho24
Any emotion, if it is sincere, is involuntary.
10:06 PM on 03/25/2010
Another signing ceremony. Good ol Rush will be popping like a zit if he watches it...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MaxxMahOnline
Author, Professional Writer, Independent Publisher
10:24 PM on 03/25/2010
When is the "drugster" leaving for Costa Rica? He's been silent on the passing or have their just been a media blackout on him.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CabinAgue
We are ALL in this together.
10:24 PM on 03/25/2010
Has he had any heart trouble this week?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dylbud
10:05 PM on 03/25/2010
The fixit bill went through the Senate reconciliation process quite quickly after all. Even having to go back to the House for another vote (something they were trying to avoid), it still all happened pretty quickly. So much for Republican "stalling" tactics. Seems like "stalling" tactics wouldn't really be all that worth it when they only delay things for a day or two.
10:05 PM on 03/25/2010
Gotta love this...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8pO1oJPps1I
10:11 PM on 03/25/2010
Sorry, couldn't fan you again.

Great Clip.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
underoath
Crank up the crazy and rip off the knob !!
10:04 PM on 03/25/2010
Sweet : )