GOP assails Dems on approach to health bill

ERICA WERNER / ASSOCIATED PRESS
TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 2010
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats defended plans to push massive health care legislation through the House without a direct vote and Republicans assailed the strategy Tuesday, as both parties fenced ferociously over the health overhaul end game.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said that no final decision had been made on the complex parliamentary strategy, which would allow House Democrats to pass the Senate's health care legislation without voting on the bill itself. Instead House members, who dislike the Senate bill, would vote on a rule for debate that would deem the bill passed once a smaller package of fixes also had passed.

Hoyer defended the austere procedure, noting that it had been used in the past by both parties, and more often by Republicans, and that regardless of the approach, the House would be passing the Senate legislation.

"We're playing it straight," Hoyer said.

"We will vote on it in one form or another."

The Maryland Democrat also said the public didn't care about process but about results, and that the approach Democrats are weighing would result in enactment of President Barack Obama's landmark legislation to extend coverage to tens of millions of uninsured and create new insurance market protections for nearly everybody else.

With the House aiming to cast the decisive votes by the weekend, Republicans ramped up their attacks, seizing on the approach under consideration in the House to criticize Democrats and try to sow doubts among wavering moderates. The GOP is unanimously opposed.

"Anyone who endorses this strategy will be forever remembered for trying to claim they didn't vote for something they did," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said Tuesday. "It will go down as one of the most extraordinary legislative sleights of hand in history."

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wants to shield lawmakers from having to vote directly on the Senate-passed health care bill because it's unpopular with House Democrats.

"Nobody wanted to vote for the Senate bill," Pelosi, D-Calif., explained in a round-table meeting with liberal bloggers Monday.

"It's more insider and process-oriented than most people want to know, but I like it because people don't have to vote on the Senate bill," she said of the approach.

PHOTOS
President Barack Obama, accompanied by Vice President Joe Biden, right, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev., walks back to the White House, from the Blair House in Washington, Thursday, after meeting all day with Republican and Democrat lawmakers to renew his struggle to reform health care.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / ASSOCIATED PRESS
President Barack Obama, accompanied by Vice President Joe Biden, right, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev., walks back to the White House, from the Blair House in Washington, Thursday, after meeting all day with Republican and Democrat lawmakers to renew his struggle to reform health care.
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