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Senate Bill Will Contain a Public Option     Permalink

Reversing his position of only three weeks ago and despite some foot dragging on the part of the White House, majority leader Harry Reid announced yesterday that the merged bill he will bring to the Senate floor will contain a "public option," that is, a government-run health insurance system analogous to medicare. The bill will allow states that don't want to participate to opt out. The "opt out" part is an idea due to Sen. Tom Carper (D-DE) and pushed hard by Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY). It provides cover for red-state Democrats who feel their voters may punish them for such a plan.

In reality, the opt-out means little to nothing, as Schumer well knows. To opt out, a state will have to pass a law opting out. In states with a Democratic governor or at least one chamber of the state legislature under Democratic control, opting out is not going to happen. So, depending on the results of the 2010 elections, only a dozen or so states, where the Republicans control the entire state government, might opt out. But what will gubernatorial or legislative candidates say in these states? Maybe: "If elected, I promise to make sure you won't be able to choose cheap insurance from the blankety-blank federal government?" Probably not a winning slogan, even in the reddest states (which on the whole, are also the poorest states).

The procedure from here on out is as follows. First the Congressional Budget Office will examine Reid's proposal and say how much it is going to cost. If it comes in at under the magic (and totally arbitrary) $900 gigabuck mark set by President Obama, Reid will finish drafting the text and send the bill to the Senate, possibly as early as next week. Then senators can offer amendments. An amendment will surely be offered to strip out the public option, but such an amendment will require 51 votes to be accepted. All 40 Republicans will vote for it and if 11 Democrats vote for it, it could be stripped but it is doubtful that 11 Democrats will vote for it. This whole procedure is show to allow maybe half a dozen Democrats to vote for the amendment to prove to the folks back home that they are against the public option. Some amendments might actually pass. One to watch is one from Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) which would force employers who offer health insurance to provide plans from at least two companies, to give employees a real choice. This amendment would shake up the insurance industry more than the public option, and it might even have a chance.

When all amendments have been offered and voted on, some Democrat will introduce a cloture motion to cut off debate. If Reid has counted correctly, all 58 Democrats and two allied independents will vote for cloture and it will be invoked. After that, a limited amount of additional debate will be allowed (typically 20 hours). Then there will be a straight up-or-down vote on the bill. If it passes and the House has passed a comparable bill, the two bills will go to a conference committee where everyone will pull out all stops to get their favorite provisions in the bill. A key question here is who gets to be on the conference committee, especially which Democrats, since they are likely to simply ignore the Republicans altogether and work out the compromises among themselves.

Public option or no public option, there is still a lot of uncertainty about the final bill. Here are just a few of the elements still up for grabs.

The next few weeks may not be Armageddon, but there is going to be all out war between Congressional Democrats and the insurance industry. The White House is now firmly committed to getting a bill passed and will do everything it can to get a bill to the President's desk this year, even without Olympia Snowe's vote (which seems unlikely now). Obama may even unleash his chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, and tell him to get the votes and don't report back how he did it. Emanuel can be nasty, Karl Rove but without the social graces. Obama jokes about Emanuel all the time. Example: "In Egypt, we had the opportunity to tour the pyramids. I'm sure you've all seen the pictures of Rahm on that camel. I admit, I was a little nervous about the whole situation. I said at the time, 'This is a wild animal known to bite, kick and spit. And who knows what the camel could do.' "