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Max Baucus On Health Care Compromise: 'I Was Right'

MATT GOURAS   11/12/10 07:43 PM ET   AP

MISSOULA, Mont. — The key Senate Democrat who delayed health care reform last year while trying to get Republican buy-in is now facing the uncomfortable reality of his own prediction, leading him to weigh some bipartisan changes to his party's signature legislation.

U.S. Sen. Max Baucus' reputation as a dealmaker will be put to the test as he faces resurgent Republicans hostile to legislation that has been associated with him nearly as much as President Barack Obama.

The high-ranking Democrat, who has in the past drawn the ire of party faithful for seeking middle ground with Republicans, can't escape his prediction last summer that the health care bill needed GOP votes if it was going to last the years. At the time, liberals hammered him for trying to get Republicans on board.

"And I was right," Baucus said.

Baucus told The Associated Press in an interview Friday that unpopular provisions could be on the chopping block or subject to more negotiation due to the new Congress – perhaps even the personal mandate that Baucus still believes is needed to ensure charitable care isn't shifted onto others. On Friday, he unveiled legislation to strip a tax provision in the bill small businesses complained was burdensome.

Baucus maintains – even the better part of a year later – that voters hostile in large numbers toward the measure will warm to it as the lengthy list of provisions take effect. The bulk of the bill will last, he predicts.

The Republicans who seized control of the House in part by promising a repeal of health care overhaul won't be able to deliver on that promise because of the huge majority needed in the Senate to break parliamentary stalemates, Baucus said.

"That does not mean it shouldn't be changed, because it should be changed," Baucus said. "We are going to listen to the American people."

Out in independent-minded Montana, Baucus has heard no shortage of criticism over a provision that would require those who still don't have insurance after various program expansions take place in 2014 to purchase insurance through a government sponsored exchange.

"I can understand that. No one likes to be told what to do, especially in a state like ours," Baucus said.

But any changes made next year will require buy-in from Republicans. So will deals to reduce the deficit, or to reform the tax code to make it simpler.

Baucus told a group of business leaders Friday morning that party leaders will each have to agree to give a little. Right now, with angry Republican leaders looking to politically embarrass Obama such compromises seem unlikely.

"There is no reason not to try," Baucus said. "It's early, the election was just a week ago."

Montana Republican congressman Rep. Denny Rehberg is so far not talking about compromises. Just this week he told reporters that House Republicans want the full Bush tax cuts to remain in place – Baucus and other Democrats don't want to extend them for the wealthiest. Rehberg, speaking for many House colleagues, is adamant that spending need to be reduced to 2008 levels or less.

Baucus said his first meetings back in Washington D.C. will be with veteran Senate Republicans to see where a deal can be reached. He said he plans a phone call with Rehberg, who is climbing in seniority on the House appropriations committee. All sides will want to reduce the deficit and do what can be done to spur the economy, Baucus said.

The Democrat who even stood behind Bush at the signing of the 2001 tax cut bill is eager to help both sides cut another deal, even it that seems highly unlikely amid the current heat of a tea party-fueled debate.

Baucus said voters are clearly angry, casting an even darker shadow over bipartisanship that is hard in the best of times.

"It is going to be difficult to find cooperation," he said. "It's not going to be easy."

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MISSOULA, Mont. — The key Senate Democrat who delayed health care reform last year while trying to get Republican buy-in is now facing the uncomfortable reality of his own prediction, leading hi...
MISSOULA, Mont. — The key Senate Democrat who delayed health care reform last year while trying to get Republican buy-in is now facing the uncomfortable reality of his own prediction, leading hi...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bill Bushing
Liberal but open to ideas that make sense (leaves
10:17 AM on 12/26/2010
I have health insurance but I do not support requiring it of all. However, that poses a real dilemma as to who pays for the health care of the uninsured? We are one of the few developed nations that does not have a reasonable health insurance program. It would seem that is essential to the pursuit of "life, liberty and happiness."

I do not understand why our system has saddled business with the cost of health insurance. Certainly that impacts our competitiveness. I am certainly not pro Wall Street or "too large to fail" corporations, but I do question why business has to cover what is provided via government (and, yes, taxes) in other countries we compete with.

Having seen more than I wanted to about the inside of health insurance, there are vast sums that could be contained if it were not for profit.
08:54 AM on 12/14/2010
Yeah, you were "right" all right.

You squandered the supermajority we elected and set a tone of deference to the corporatists that would make any right winger proud.

Congratulations, Baucus, for selling America down the river.
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murphysgirl
I prefer coffee, not tea..
10:47 AM on 11/14/2010
Baucus is partially the reason that healthcare reform has been so vilified.For months, he stalled the
process by placating to Olympia Snowe, Chuck Grassley and the senator from Wyoming..The Republicans watered down the bill and then voted against it anyway.

Baucus got suckered into thinking that he would have a nominal role in healthcare reform, but he just ended up with egg on his face.
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pursang
Corporate Criminals Playing with Tanks
10:27 AM on 11/14/2010
Headline: Baucus looks at Baucus with Rose Colored Glasses.

America needs Statesman and Leaders, Max Baucus is neither and he never will be. With Obama and Reid putting him on point for Health Care Reform we were assured of getting a watered down program that would accomplish very little and be vilified by the right. Mission accomplished?
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tcnsrq
excuse me
10:15 AM on 11/14/2010
it's liberals that kept their seats in the last election....brown nosing DINOS got hammered and lost their seats Max.
09:18 AM on 11/14/2010
If he's stuck with his original white paper on health care reform, it would have been great. He didn't and it sucks.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
josephebacon
08:42 AM on 11/14/2010
Max, you were right...EXTREMELY Right in surrendering to Wall Street. And thanks to you, the rich will be able to complete the destruction of the middle class and leave the poor into debtor prisons to pay for health care. Meanwhile the crooked CEOs will double their salaries and the rich will bank all those increased dividend checks!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ThePeoplesKey
Writer/General Disreputable Rogue
08:40 AM on 11/14/2010
Dear Max,

You can't negotiate with the ignorant, liars, and people without honor. Best to just come up with the legislation the people REALLY want and let the people see their representatives vote against it. Saves a lot of time. When election time comes, you can then pick out all the benefits to your constituents your opponent voted against (which by that time will have become FACTS) to win re-election. Saves a lot of time and heartache in the long run. That's the way it's supposed to work. Of course, based on the average US citizens voting record, it appears that facts don't matter. Therefore, you should look on your elected position as a patriotic service, not a career. That mind set allows you to draft the correct legislation, win or lose. If you lose, at least you'll go down having done your work to the best of your ability. Then you can come back and say you were right and it will be believable. Based on the behavior of insurance companies since this legislation was passed. The most you've done, is kick the can down the road once again for the next generation. Not much to be proud of there . . .
07:32 AM on 11/14/2010
He did manage to hold things up for months and ensure that every reform that the american public would have benefitted from was either dropped or watered down to appease the Republican Guardians of the US Health Care Industry.
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Sneakers1
Animal Lover
09:04 AM on 11/14/2010
Exactly!
09:20 AM on 11/14/2010
His lobbyist friend-lLiz Fowler- watered down everything and Conrad did the rest..Baucus and Conrad traded the American people for their Wall Street- HealthCare corporations donations..

SHameless pandering and delusion!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ZeraLee
A Citizen's View from Main Street
04:16 AM on 11/14/2010
The republicans were never going to participate in health care reform with or without the Democrats. Nor would they have given the Democrats success on anything of substance.
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spandautoseattle
Things that matter. (MLK)
04:11 AM on 11/14/2010
If he was right, where then were all these Republicans who helped creating a respectable hcare-reform? Apart from the insurance-lobbyists, pencil in hand, no Republican put any creative work into the bill, while attacking it from day one until it was just the weak product that it didn't have to be. No thanks to the Senator.
So where does he think he was right? Some chuzpah from an obstructionist.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ethan Reynolds
02:56 AM on 11/14/2010
Baucus is a tool.
08:55 AM on 12/14/2010
You misspelled that -- you left off the leading "s."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kjohney
trust me... I'm liberal.
02:20 AM on 11/14/2010
He was right. The American people have spoken loud and clear. They don't want affordable health care. They don't want the government interfering with the insurance industry's right to charge whatever they want, nor do they want government meddling to force the industry to keep insuring those paying customers when they get sick. And especially they want to keep government hands away from a pharmaceutical industry that is so strapped for cash they have to charge Americans 11 times as much for the same medicine as they charge the Japanese, just to make ends meet. When the voters gave a monumental vote of confidence to the GOP few days ago this was their message.
Well this, and that government should lower the taxes on our beleaguered fat cats while slashing unemployment benefits.
06:46 AM on 11/14/2010
Very accurate description of the American conservative voter.
01:17 AM on 11/14/2010
In Baucus World of course he's right.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
b525
01:03 AM on 11/14/2010
Part of the Republican's new "Pledge to America" includes repealing/stopping national healthcare reform. The Tea Partiers also wish to repeal recently passed healthcare reform.

Healthcare reform was designed to bring MORE AFFORDABLE healthcare to more Americans and control waste.

40-50 MILLION Americans now don't have heath care/dental care.

When the WELL OFF use their medical insurance to get mood altering/mood stabilizing drugs (lovingly called "my meds".) it's called being responsible and "taking care of your mental health".

When poor people with no health insurance buy illegal non-prescription drugs because they have no health insurance to treat depression/mental illness it's called "breaking the law" and they go to dangerous/underfunded jails or prisons where they can be assaulted/killed and get a permanent police record which bars them from future employment.

Do some of us believe that being poor is not depressing and stressful?

2/3rds !!! of the U.S. trade deficit, which is now nearly 1 TRILLION dollars per year, is caused by the importation of foreign oil, which is used to make gasoline for 190,000,000 American drivers. Not from reckless government/entitlement spending as many now claim.

The total GDP of the United States is 14 TRILLION dollars per year, which is 14,000 BILLION dollars.

The recently passed Healthcare Reform bill is projected to cost 200 billion dollars per year......thats only 1/5th of ONE of those 14,000 billions the U.S. takes in each year.