This afternoon Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid told reporters that the Finance Committee will act on its portion of the bill before Congress' month-long break. Then Sen. Reid will merge that bill with separate legislation already passed by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. The Nevada Democrat says the decision to delay a vote was made Wednesday night in the hopes of getting a final bipartisan bill.
As I have suggested in the past, the odds of getting a “bipartisan bill” that would truly reform healthcare, providing sustainable, affordable care for everyone are slim to none. Most Republicans do not want true health care reform; certainly they do not want changes that cut into the profits of the for-profit healthcare industry. Polls show that Republicans see covering everyone as a secondary goal. Meanwhile less than 20 percent of all Americans now identify themselves as Republicans. So the Senate’s futile quest for a bipartisan solution would seem to be putting the interests of a minority ahead of the hopes of the majority of Americans who would like the security of healthcare reform as soon as possible.
As President Obama pointed out Wednesday night, the longer we delay, the higher health care costs rise –while more and more Americans lose their health insurance.
Nevertheless, the Washington Post continues to take a skeptical view of the reform process: