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Undocumented are not included in
Senate Health Care Reform Bill |
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Senate Health Care Reform Bill
does not Include Undocumented
WASHINGTON (By Ceci Connolly,
Washington Post) July 15, 2009
—
The Senate's health committee
approved legislation today — if
passed by both houses of Congress —
would vastly expand health insurance
coverage in America and tighten
restrictions on the way the industry
operates.
The 13-10 committee vote, along
party lines, gives President Obama
an important victory in what
promises to be a lengthy and
contentious drive to enact a
comprehensive health-care overhaul
this year.
The bill, named "Quality, Affordable
Health Coverage for All Americans
(but does not include
undocumented)," would create a
controversial new
government-sponsored health program
that would compete with the private
sector. It requires every American
carry health insurance and provides
generous discounts to people who
cannot afford a plan. Millions more
Americans would also be eligible for
Medicaid, the joint federal-state
health program for the poor.
Under the legislation, most
businesses would be required to
offer insurance to workers or pay a
$750 annual fee per full-time
employee. Companies with fewer than
25 employees would be exempt from
the so-called employer mandate,
which faces fierce opposition by the
Chamber of Commerce and National
Federation of Independent
Businesses.
Sen. Mike Enzi, (R-Wyo.), the
highest-ranking Republican on the
committee, delivered a bitter speech
decrying the "partisan bill" as one
that increases the deficit, "kills
jobs and cuts wages."
More than anything, the vote this
morning by the panel, formally named
the Senate Health, Education, Labor
and Pensions Committee, gives
Democrats a bit of forward motion in
a legislative effort that has
sputtered in recent weeks.
The Senate Finance Committee, which
has jurisdiction over the financing
of health reform, has fallen behind
its schedule as Chairman Max Baucus
(D-Mont.) searches for bipartisan
consensus on the politically
difficult issue.
Three members of the panel scheduled
a news conference for this afternoon
to put pressure on the insurance
industry to contribute up to $100
billion over the next decade toward
the cost of expanded health
coverage. House Democrats have
announced a plan that would force
the richest 2 million U.S. taxpayers
to shoulder much of the cost of an
expansion of the nation's
health-care system, by imposing a
surtax of as much as 5.4 percent on
income above $350,000 a year.
Also today, the Democratic Party's
Organizing for America released new
television ads touting the urgent
need for health reform. The
30-second spot, dubbed "It's Time,"
features average Americans who say
they have been negatively affected
by the current system.
Democratic Sen. Christopher Dodd
(Conn.) is filling in as chair of
the health committee for the ailing
Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) , a
longtime proponent of health-care
reform who has devoted decades to
the cause of universal health
coverage.
The absent senator, who is battling
terminal brain cancer, issued an
emotional statement to the committee
from his sickbed, recalling that his
two slain brothers announced their
candidacies for the presidency in
the Russell Caucus Room where
today's vote took place.
"As you vote today, know that I am
with you in heart and mind and soul,
and I wish very much that I could be
with you in person," Kennedy said.
"The American people are on the
march once more, and they will not
stop until quality, affordable
health care is the birthright of
every American. And we are with them
every step of the way."
Dodd told his colleagues that
Kennedy, a close friend, is "is
ecstatic about our efforts here."