Senator Kennedy Missed In Congress As Health Care Package Waffles

2009 July 13
by dekerivers

There was a sense several months ago that Senator Kennedy’s health would allow him to be more active in the halls of Congress as his signature issue, health care, took shape.  But his condition is such that he works from his Massachusetts home, and therefore there is a real absence of his abilities in Congress.  This weekend there was a huge story in the Boston Globe about this matter, and part is printed below.  If goes without saying that the issue of health care in America is very real, and the uninsured need coverage, and as such we are miles behind the other large industrialized world when it comes to this matter.  Frankly, it is embarrassing.

“Obviously, if Kennedy were here, the whole process would be further along,’’ said Senator Tom Harkin, a Democrat from Iowa and a senior member of Kennedy’s Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions. “He’d be working his magic. He has a way of getting everybody on board.’’

Kennedy still holds weekly conference calls with the health committee. He speaks by phone from his home in Hyan nis Port to his staff in Washington, to Democratic leaders, and to the White House, his colleagues say. His office is a hive of activity, and his top aides have been working almost nonstop for months on the health committee’s bill, now nearly finished.

But Kennedy has not been in the Capitol since late April, and it is not clear when he will return. His booming voice and hearty laugh are missing from the corridors. Aides to Kennedy would not say who he has personally spoken to in the healthcare debate, or when, and they would not discuss his health status. Friends say he remains involved, despite his disease.

“He’s trying to work about an hour in the morning and an hour in the afternoon on the health bill, and he does it mostly by phone,’’ said Gerry Doherty, a longtime friend. “It goes without saying how committed he is to the health bill.’’

Even if Kennedy were in perfect health, the battle over the healthcare initiative, and the trillions of dollars at stake in the medical economy, would rage on. But as a Democrat-led Congress races the political clock, Kennedy’s colleagues sorely miss his negotiating skill, his knowledge of the policy details, and his talent for compromising with Republicans and disparate elements of his party.

There were heavy skirmishes last week on several fronts. One was the public insurance option: Liberals desperately want a strong government insurance option consumers could choose to buy into instead of private coverage, forcing private insurers to compete by lowering premiums. But opponents of that approach say it could fatally wound the private insurance industry.

Congress is also divided on how to pay for the healthcare bill, which is expected to cost a trillion dollars or more. Baucus’s group wanted to start levying taxes on the most expensive health benefits offered by employers, but that idea has proved unpopular with unions and middle-class voters. The House, meanwhile, is entertaining a tax surcharge on the wealthiest Americans.

It is increasingly clear that Democrats cannot afford to ignore all Republicans in the Senate. There are 60 Democrats, exactly enough to prevent a filibuster, but two of them – Kennedy and Robert Byrd of West Virginia – are ailing. Under special Senate rules, the bill could be approved by a simple majority after Oct. 15, but parliamentary complications of using those rules for healthcare could make that difficult.

The day-to-day handling of the healthcare bill on Kennedy’s health committee has been handed to his good friend, Senator Chris Dodd of Connecticut, who remains in close contact with the Massachusetts senator. But Dodd has major distractions. He is also running the Senate Banking Committee, which is undertaking an overhaul of financial regulations; he faces a tough reelection fight at home amid dismal poll numbers and accusations that he received preferential treatment on two mortgages. Last week, he also suffered a personal tragedy when his sister died from a sudden recurrence of cancer.

Enzi, the ranking Republican on the health committee who is working with Baucus’s coalition, has sent out a regular stream of scathing press releases picking apart the health committee bill.

Hatch, who has collaborated with Kennedy on major healthcare bills such as the Children’s Health Insurance Program, said that a month ago he had an “extensive, hour-long conversation’’ by phone with Kennedy. The Massachusetts senator promised to work with him on healthcare, he said, but instead the committee came out with a partisan bill that had “done away with bipartisanship.’’

“If Kennedy had been here,’’ said Hatch, “the first thing he would have done is pick up the phone and call people like me and say, ‘Let’s see what we can do.’ ’’

3 Responses leave one →
  1. 2009 July 13
    Ferrell Gummitt permalink

    Alec Dude: We hit $1 Trillion in debt today. That is: $1,000,000,000,000 in debt. The conservative projection is another $1,000,000,000,000 debt if ObamaCare is enacted. How are we going to pay for this? Oh, that’s right “Cap and Trade”, the largest and most punitive tax increase ever formulated to be executed against the poorest and the most needy citizens.

    Of course this will solve everything.

    But, at least you will have a choice of which doctor to go to under Obamacare of the 3 or 4 left in America after it is enacted.

    • 2009 July 13

      And what about the 40 plus million without health care?

      What does your moral code say about that?

  2. 2009 July 13
    Alec permalink

    We must have health-care reform in this country! Health care now! I The current system is bankrupting us all…

Leave a Reply

Note: You can use basic XHTML in your comments. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to this comment feed via RSS