Pelosi says that she doesn't have the votes to pass the Senate's version of health care. W. T. F.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/21/AR2010012101604.html?hpid=topnewsIf they're such a big problem, pass another amendment later. Unfortunately, by (rather reasonably) assuming they had 60 votes, the Dems have made it *very* hard to step back and get, say, Snowe's vote on health care now. And if Brown voted for it he'd immediately be seen as a traitor by the national Republican party. So that leaves "nothing" or "reconciliation." Reconciliation, i.e. making it part of the budget bill and passing it with 50 votes, is incredibly dangerous since A) it looks bad and B) the bill would expire after 5 years, when many of health care reform's benefits are very long-term. It's not good policy to pass this just for a short term and then possibly chaotically revert the system later.
Which leaves the best option as being PASS THE FREAKIN' BILL. It's really flawed and has optimistic projections etc. but it would be political AND policy suicide to do nothing. Not passing the bill would "prove" it was wrong all along and a near missed disaster; only thing to do is pass it and find out.
Also, disagree with metroid that the Republicans are likely to help health care pass. The US government is designed to encourage a certain amount of gridlock and stasis under the theory that only the best legislation gets through. The easiest thing to happen is nothing if nobody can agree. Even if we grant that the Republicans would want to do *something* about health care, brinksmanship on both sides would mean that nothing is likelier to pass than one or the other side's plan.
Also in the bad news for liberals this week: Supreme Court overturns campaign finance restrictions after all, undoing their work from just 2003. Sigh. Anthony Kennedy, philosopher-king of America, strikes again. I'll grant that he's actually *right* by the letter of the Constitution, but... ugh. This whole thing's a mess. Much as I like campaign finance reform, I'd be scared of a constitutional amendment to explicitly allow it under the theory it could be used to make fully state-regulated campaigns, which would also be a bad thing. What we had before was the best compromise, and now it's gone. Siiiiiigh.