WASHINGTON — The Senate voted Thursday to reinvent the nation’s health care system, passing a bill to guarantee access to health insurance for tens of millions of Americans and to rein in health costs as proposed by President Obama. The 60-to-39
party-line vote, on the 25th straight day of debate on the legislation,
brings Democrats a step closer to a goal they have pursued for decades.
It clears the way for negotiations with the House, which passed a
broadly similar bill last month by a vote of 220 to 215. If the
two chambers can strike a deal, as seems likely, the resulting product
would vastly expand the role and responsibilities of the federal
government. It would, as lawmakers said repeatedly in the debate, touch
the lives of nearly all Americans. The bill would require most Americans to have health insurance, would add 15 million people to the Medicaid
rolls and would subsidize private coverage for low- and middle-income
people, at a cost to the government of $871 billion over 10 years,
according to the Congressional Budget Office. President Obama said after the vote that the health care bill was “the most important piece of social legislation since the Social Security Act” was adopted and that it represented “the toughest measure ever taken to hold the insurance companies accountable.” The budget office estimates that the bill would provide coverage to 31
million uninsured people, but still leave 23 million uninsured in 2019.
One-third of those remaining uninsured would be illegal immigrants. If the bill becomes law, it would be a milestone in social policy, comparable with the creation of Social Security in 1935 and Medicare
in 1965. But unlike those programs, the new initiative lacks bipartisan
support. Only one Republican voted for the House bill last month, and
no Republicans voted for the Senate version. Senator Olympia J. Snowe of Maine, a moderate Republican who has spent years working with Democrats on health care and other issues, expressed despair. “I was extremely disappointed,” Ms. Snowe said. After Senate Democrats
locked up 60 votes within their caucus, she said, “there was zero
opportunity to amend the bill or modify it, and Democrats had no
incentive to reach across the aisle.”CONTINUE READING...