DAMN THE TORPEDOES, FULL STEAM AHEAD FOR HEALTHCARE BILL
Written by Jeff Crouere
Wednesday, 17 March 2010
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is
sounding desperate these days. Her impatience is evident as the healthcare
debate drags on and her Democratic majority in the House is threatened.
While the Democrats currently
have a comfortable margin in Congress, it is not insurmountable. Republicans
need to pick-up only 40 seats in November and the GOP will target the 48
congressional Democrats serving in districts won by McCain in the 2008
election.
Over the past few months, the
healthcare debate has been a major loser for Democrats as tea parties and town
hall meetings have galvanized opposition to the bill and generated enthusiasm
for the GOP. While Republicans participated in the ridiculous farce of a healthcare
summit last week, they did not retreat from their objections with the
President’s $2.5 trillion bill.
Right now, Democrats are trying
to find some formula that will work in Congress. The Senate and House bills are
very different and the President’s modified plan, which was presented last
week, is still 2,400 pages. Another version of the bill was proposed this week
that Pelosi exclaimed was “much smaller.” In reality, all of the bills produce
the same end result, government control of our country’s healthcare system.
Democrats are determined to pass
some type of bill, even if it will cost them their House majority. They have
invested so much political capital and time on the issue that a complete defeat
would be humiliating. Yet, as they move full steam ahead, the political
torpedoes are everywhere for the Democrats.
Without question, the issue creates
problems for the Democrats as the vast majority of Americans are steadfastly
opposed. According to the latest CNN poll, only 25% of Americans support the
bills that have been approved by Congress. The poll indicates that 75% of
Americans want Congress to start over or stop work on the healthcare bill altogether.
As the Democrats remain
preoccupied with a healthcare bill, the American people are getting angrier.
Voters who elect members of Congress don’t like their wishes to be disregarded
so completely. The American people want immediate action on the economy, not a
$2.5 trillion expansion of government in the healthcare arena. The whole debate
is quite a distraction from the real work on the economy that Americans are
demanding. Just this month, another 36,000 Americans lost their jobs.
The Democrats will probably
advocate a “reconciliation” vote that will require only a majority of Senators.
While this maneuver has been done in the past by Republicans, it has never been
used on an issue so unpopular with the American people and something that has
such a huge impact on our economy. Regardless of whether reconciliation is used
or not, it is clear that the longer the President and his Democratic allies are
obsessed on the healthcare issue, the easier it will be for Republicans to take
control of Congress this fall.
Even a smaller bill will allow
the government to lay the groundwork for a much larger healthcare role in the
future. It is always easier to grow a government program than to rescind it.
Democrats know that if they pass a bill this year, the GOP will not stop it
from growing next year and the year after. Over time, all government
bureaucracies tend to become larger and more expensive.
To prevent a massive expansion of
government, Republicans need to defeat this measure and prevent a new
bureaucracy from being created. The GOP is now working on behalf of the
American people while the Democrats are clearly doing the bidding of special
interests and bureaucrats. The different agendas are both disturbing and clear
to all Americans, who will remember this historic debate in November.