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Public Option Stays Very Much Alive

Mike Lux | Tue Sep 29, 2009 at 17:39

As Chris noted, today we lost two amendment votes in the Senate Finance Committee on the public option, one offered by Sen. Rockefeller (8 ayes, 15 nays), and one by Sen. Schumer (10 ayes, 13 nays). Traditional media outlets everywhere are reporting this is a massive defeat for the public option, but I don't see it that way- in fact quite the opposite.

I have said before (most recently here) that the Senate Finance Committee was conservative, in fact the most conservative committee makeup in the Senate, and that we would be likely to lose these votes:

With numbers like this, and with the entire Democratic base mobilized intensely around the issue, you would have to be politically tone deaf as a Democrat to oppose this, but this is the Senate Finance Committee, so public option advocates are likely to lose these votes. The question, though, will be the margin. On a committee this conservative, far more conservative than the Senate as a whole, if we only get seven votes for the public option amendments, that would have to be considered a major political victory, and a sign that the public option can definitely get a majority vote on the floor.


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Senate Public Option Picture To Clear Up Next Week

by: Chris Bowers | Tue Sep 15, 2009 at 14:16

Senator Max Baucus's draft of health care legislation appears to be set for release tomorrow night. The Senate Finance Committee is scheduled to start the "mark-up" process--debate and amendments--on September 23rd. Or, at least that is the latest deadline Baucus is floating:

Baucus (D-Mont.) told the Wall Street Journal that the bill, expected to cost $880 billion over the next decade, is "on track" for debate by the committee starting Sept. 23.

There are going to be a lot of amendments offered by both Democrats and Republicans during the mark-up process. Many of these amendments will be attempts by Democrats on the Finance Committee to improve the bill. Baucus doesn't think they will pass:

Based on the comments by several committee Democrats after a meeting Monday evening, that mark up could be a lengthy one. Baucus acknowledged that the mark-up could prove a busy one but predicted that Democrats would support the package he plans to unveil Wednesday without major changes. "I don't see any deal-breaker amendments," Baucus said. "Put it this way: It's unlikely that any amendments, which basically change the framework, will be accepted."

If there is an amendment to include a public option in the bill, it will go a long way toward clarifying the Senate whip count picture. Five of the Democrats who have been the most difficult to pin down on the public option--Max Baucus, Kent Conrad, Tom Carper, Blanche Lincoln and Bill Nelson--are on the Finance Committee. Another Democrat, Ron Wyden, has expressed that he is open to a public option, but has not firmly committed.


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Sen. Jon Tester (D) MT
Sen. Jon Tester (D) MT

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