Brace Yourself for Super Stupid

These final stages of the healthcare reform process have the potential to make us totally lose our shpadoinkle. I mean, we’re talking many new levels of congressional and media stupid. Stupid about process, stupid about the content of the various bills, stupid about what’s happening in the White House.

We may have passed a crucial stage today, but the real insanity has yet to begin. So sometimes it’s helpful to have an array of touchstones established prior to such an endeavor. Here are the two most important questions moving forward, and everything else — all the rest of the crazy noise — is secondary:

1) Will Harry Reid enforce lockstep on 60 votes for cloture, especially if there’s a robust public option attached to the Senate and final bills?

2) Will the House Progressive Caucus hold together on their opposition to any legislation without a robust public option?

These are the most important questions.

60 votes against the filibuster will allow a bill with the public option to pass with 50-plus-Biden in the final vote. And if the progressives hold their caucus together, there will have to be a robust public option in the final bill, or else healthcare reform dies. It doesn’t matter what Kent Conrad says or what douchery Lieberman engages in — if there’s 60 votes for cloture and the progressives hold together, there will absolutely be healthcare reform with a public option.

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  • http://www.osborneink.com Matt Osborne

    Ari Fleischer said on AC360 last night that the SFC bill sets a fine of $200/yr for young, healthy people who don’t carry coverage.That’s it. That’s the mandate. Two hundred simoleons is the price for not being covered.So my question is: what’s the price of the public option going to be?

  • http://madashellliberal.blogspot.com madashellliberal

    There would be no fine and no worry about a public option if the bill had been written correctly in the first place.Universal coverage, or medicare for all, would have knocked the insurance companies right out of the process. Nobody would have had to make concessions to them in order to get the pre-existing conditions clauses to become history. But you can bet your ass that they will figure out a way around the pre-existing conditions clauses and still refuse to cover people (they probably have figured it all out before they ever bargained it away).Let’s face it; health insurance is a scam, a protection racket, and it is not necessary to a functioning health care system.As far as cost goes, Congress should be capable of figuring out a way to get some of the money that working people like me used to be able to earn from the clutches of the multi-millionaires that it was redistributed to in the past fifteen years. If they can’t, we should can their asses and hire someone who can.

  • camel54

    Lord, I may have to block myself from the news for a while. I’m a little tired of being an addict anyway, but these next few weeks might just kill me.Among the myriad things I don’t understand, the latest is why the AHIP report didn’t send Democrats, including at least a few dumbass blue dogs, into a fury at the extortion being committed by the insurance lobby. Honestly, you would think that the congress people would have said, “Oh really? That’s how we’re doing this? Fine, HUGE public option it is.” That would have totally taken the legs out from under the insurance companies. It still could, but it should have happened already.