Obamacare's Kabuki End
Game<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992518:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>
The doctors in lab coats surrounding President Barack Obama as he gave his
latest health care speech yesterday were not there to give the President a
physical; that happened
Sunday<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992519:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>.
No, these doctors were props, dressed to impress for what the White House
claims is their "final
push"<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992520:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>for
the President's government take-over of the health care industry. The
President again repeated the same old tired claims he has been making for
months: "The proposal I’ve put forward gives Americans more control over
their health care," "our proposal is paid for," and "my proposal would bring
down the cost of health care for millions." We, and plenty of others, have
refuted all these claims before, but this time they are particularly easy to
expose as patently false. President Obama gave away the game when he
said<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992521:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>
:

Our cost-cutting measures mirror most of the proposals in the current Senate
bill, which reduces most people’s premiums and brings down our deficit by up
to $1 trillion over the next two decades. And those aren’t my numbers – they
are the savings determined by the CBO, which is the Washington acronym for
the nonpartisan, independent referee of Congress.


But there is one huge difference between the Senate bill and what the
President kept referring to as my/our proposal: the Senate bill actually
exists. For all the talk in Washington about Democrats in the Senate using
reconciliation to pass a final version of Obamacare, one key fact has been
overlooked: no reconciliation bill exists. Not in the House. Not in the
Senate. Nowhere. It simply has not yet been written, and there are plenty of
reasons to believe it never will.

The White House is telling the
public<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992522:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>they
expect the House to pass the Senate bill, and then both the House and
Senate would pass the yet-to-be-drafted reconciliation, all before Easter
recess. But Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) simply does not have the votes to
pass the Senate bill. If she did, it would already be law. To convince her
fellow wayward Democrats to vote for the Senate bill, the yet-to-be-drafted
reconciliation bill is expected
to<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992522:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>:
1) scale back the tax on high-end health insurance policies (decreases
revenue); 2) close the Medicare D loophole (costs money); 3) boost insurance
subsidies (costs money); and 4) increase Medicaid payments (costs a ton of
money). Where exactly do House and Senate aides writing this new bill expect
to come up with the money to pay for all these new goodies? And they have to
find that cash because all reconciliation bills must be certified by the
Congressional Budget Office (CBO) to reduce the deficit by $1 billion over
five 
years.<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992523:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>And
that CBO score will take at least a week, or possibly two to complete.

So when will the public get to see this reconciliation bill? The Wall Street
Journal<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992524:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>reports
that "Democrats have started writing the formal reconciliation bill"
and "intend to send it to the Congressional Budget Office for evaluation by
the end of the week." But The Los Angeles
Times<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992525:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>reports
that: "Senior Democrats on Capitol Hill will not finish writing the
reconciliation package until next week at the earliest." Our advice: don't
hold your breath.

In the meantime Speaker Pelosi is bleeding the
votes<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992526:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>she
needs to first pass the Senate bill, by an up or down vote, in the
House. Just 220 members of the House voted for their version of Obamacare in
November. Since that time, Reps. Robert Wexler (D-FL) and Neil Abercrombie
(D-HI) have left the House; Rep. John Murtha (D-PA) has passed away; and
Joseph Cao (R-LA) has said he will vote against the bill. That leaves Pelosi
216 votes, which would be exactly enough to pass the Senate bill. But then
there is Rep. Bart Stupak (D-MI) who will not vote for the Senate bill since
it uses taxpayer money to fund abortion. And Stupak
says<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992527:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>he
has a dozen other members that will switch from yes to no with him.
And
Rep. Michael Acuri (D-NY) now
says<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992528:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>he
is likely to switch his vote from yes to no. And Rep. Shelly Berkley
(D-NV), who voted yes the first time,
says<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992520:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>she
is "not inclined to support the Senate" bill. And Rep. Gerry Connolly
says<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992529:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>he
could "absolutely" switch his vote from yes to no. And now
Congressional
Progressive Caucus Rep. Raúl Grijalva, (D-AZ)
says<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992530:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>he's
less likely to vote for the final health care reform bill if the
reconciliation bill contains the ideas President Obama outlined yesterday.

One House Democrat tells the LA
Times<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992522:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>why
the White House is facing such a tough sell: "It's a no-win situation
for those of us in moderate districts. If you vote no, your base is upset.
If you vote yes, everyone else is upset. You almost couldn't design a
legislative vise more damaging to moderate Democrats -- or that puts our
majority more at risk." But don't worry House Democrats, the Senate is going
to do everything it can to convince you that you aren't going to walk the
plank alone again. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) tells
Politico<http://paracom.paramountcommunication.com/ct/3992531:5943192298:m:1:147140772:B4865E3AEA50A4F7EB33E97091677ED1>that
Senate Democrats are planning a gesture some time next week that will
guarantee to House Democrats the Senate will act: "I don't know what the
gesture will be but it will be a convincing gesture." Kabuki theater indeed.

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