News & Election Videos

SEND TO A FRIEND | PRINT | | Share Share

Roundtable on Health Care Compromises

By Special Report With Bret Baier

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SENATOR LAMAR ALEXANDER: What the president is doing is asking House Democrats to hold hands, jump off a cliff, and hope Harry Reid catches them. And Senator Reid won't have any incentive to catch them because by the time the reconciliation bill gets to the Senate, the president will have signed the healthcare bill into law and he'll be on his way to Indonesia.

Receive news alerts

[+] More

PRESS SECRETARY ROBERT GIBBS: The information I passed on last week about March 18, the day the president leaves for Indonesia and ultimately Australia, was something that we gleaned from conversations had with Capitol Hill.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BRET BAIER, "SPECIAL REPORT" HOST: There appears to be disconnect on timeline of passing health care reform legislation between the White House and Democratic leaders with the House majority leader saying none of us talked about March 18 except Mr. Gibbs, the White House press secretary.

One thing they do say is that the health care reform legislation has to pass, and you just heard House Speaker Pelosi in Jim Angle's piece say this about health care reform: "We have to pass the bill so that you can find out what's in it away from the fog of the controversy."

We are back with the panel with process and policy, Steve Hayes, senior writer for The Weekly Standard, Juan Williams, news analyst for National Public Radio, and syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer.

Charles?

CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER, SYNDICATED COLUMNIST: It's getting wild and wacky when you hear the statement from the speaker of the House. If I can give her the benefit of the doubt, which she probably intended - didn't actually say - I'm not sure why I'm defending her here - is that once you enact the bill people will see all the good stuff in it and then they'll appreciate it and all the negative public opinion on it will change.

I think that is the only argument the president and Pelosi have to persuade Democrats in the House who will get slaughtered in November over this bill.

What I see actually happening now is that some of the House members who appear to be staunchly opposed might be wavering. If you take Bart Stupak, who is leading the anti-abortion faction, and he is running up a white flag. He said there is a compromise that is reachable. I think in principle it is. You could find compromise language. The problem is the procedure, because if you find the compromise language it has to be done by the Senate after the House has accepted a bill that doesn't have the compromise language. As we heard Senator Alexander explain, that means that House Democrats have to have complete trust in Harry Reid and in the Senate Democrats. And that, I think, is the issue, the procedural labyrinth here.

BAIER: Steve, a lot of people are reading into Congressman Stupak and what he's saying about a possible compromise. Do you think it's there?

STEVE HAYES, SENIOR WRITER, THE WEEKLY STANDARD: Our John McCormick from The Weekly Standard just got off the phone with Congressman Stupak and asked him point blank, what do you mean? Is this a compromise or not?

Stupak said, and this is a direct quote, "Everyone is going around saying there is a compromise. There is no such thing."

He went on to tell John basically what Charles is saying. Nobody how this works mechanically. How does it actually happen? John went back to Stupak several times and said can you explain this? How does this work? How does the language get incorporated?

He basically couldn't answer the question and he later said one of the things he wouldn't accept is a letter saying basically do this now and we'll send you this letter and take care of this later. Stupak says you can't do that because later never comes.

BAIER: Because, Juan, there is a trust issue here with House members not really trusting that the Senate can take the ball once they pass the Senate bill as it exists. So that we believed was the first step in the process.

But apparently we are hearing about this new process where you can pass a reconciliation rule, and at the same time, the Senate bill then becomes law. It gets messy and it gets in the weeds, but it seems like it avoids a way for the House to act first before the Senate.

JUAN WILLIAMS, NEWS ANALYST, NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO: Right, and part of the argument coming from the White House to Congressman Stupak is this is not about abortion. This is not an abortion bill. We're not trying to pull anything over on you. We simply want to accommodate you, and we want to get this through, so how can we make a deal? Which comes back to what they were saying to The Weekly Standard.

The problem from the House perspective is just this trust issue you highlighted. Because you really have to do a two-step. You have to rely if you cast your vote, you know that the U.S. Senate is going to go through the reconciliation process and hold to the changes that you enumerated.

And there is no way for you to be assured of that. That's why a letter won't do. A letter won't mean anything if they go back on it. But the key from the White House perspective is to say, gentlemen, we're in this together and going over the cliff together. If you looking to the 2010 elections, there's no way that's we're going to do better without this bill than we will with the bill.

BAIER: Charles, let's talk about that cliff. New polls out today - first, what will health care reform cost? And 81 percent says it will cost more than projected. That is overwhelming. Secondly, will middle class taxes be raised to cover health care reform costs? 78 percent - yes.

What will it do to the federal deficit? And 66 percent, increase the deficit. And what impact will healthcare reform have on the economy? And 57 percent hurt the economy.

Democrats oftentimes point to specific elements of the health care bill. These numbers deal with the overall cost.

KRAUTHAMMER: Exactly. If you say to people, do you like this goodie, for example, no preexisting condition? Everybody will say, of course. If they say in principle do you want to insure the uninsured, who is going to oppose that? So all of that stuff separately will poll well.

But then if you actually invoke the cost, which is what we heard here with all of these questions, people understand that this is going to be overwhelmingly expensive. We are in a huge debt already now. We're going over a cliff in terms of fiscal sanity. Medicare is going broke, and we are adding a new entitlement.

And that's why when you put all the elements together and you ask as a package are you opposed or in favor, you get overwhelmingly negative results. Americans are able to add up the cost and the benefits and decide in this particular proposal and package, it's not worth it.

BAIER: Steve, finally, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, while she said it perhaps inartfully, and we used the sound bite, Democrats are buying in to if you pass it, they have enough time to turn this around to a political winner by November?

HAYES: It's hard to tell if they buy in. We'll know when they actually cast the vote.

But certainly there are some suggestions that she is being persuasive with certain members of her caucus by saying in public we'll fix this and people will understand the benefits of it.

I think really what is convincing people is what is going on in private. All of these conversations that we had seen before the Christmas Eve vote in the Senate, the cornhusker kickback, Louisiana - all of these things, they are happening again, they're just not happening in public, and they won't be discussed until long after there is a vote on this.

BAIER: There's a meeting right now, Juan, up on Capitol Hill with Rahm Emanuel, some other White House folks, and the leaders, congressional leaders behind closed doors.

WILLIAMS: Right. They are looking for deals. One thing I heard about today was you have six retiring Democrats who voted against this last time. You know what, gentlemen, this is a real gift to Americans, is the argument from the White House. This is a moment to make history. So they're pulling out all the stops. And no doubt there will be deals that are revealed.

But I must say the consequence of cornhusker kickback, for example, was that Senator Nelson said can't tolerate it, don't want it because there was too much political baggage attached. It was smearing him. That might be a lesson for Democrats.

KRAUTHAMMER: I predict Stupak will accept a compromise because I think he does not want to carry the mark of Cain all his life as the man who sank the historic health care reform.

 

SEND TO A FRIEND | PRINT | | Share Share
Sponsored Links
Related Articles
March 4, 2010
Panel on Congress and Ethics - Special Report With Bret Baier
March 1, 2010
Panel on the Democrats & Health Care - Special Report With Bret Baier
March 2, 2010
Panel on Races Across the Country - Special Report With Bret Baier
March 4, 2010
Sen. Bunning: 'Paygo Means Paygo' - Larry Elder
March 11, 2010
Dems Are Stuck With a Mess of Their Own Making - Michael Barone
Special Report With Bret Baier
Author Archive