Posts Tagged ‘Chairman’s Mark’

In the News

September 25, 2009

House Speaker Pelosi Commits to 72-Hour Wait Period for Health Vote

The Hill reports today that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has agreed to a 72-hour waiting period between posting a health care bill online and a final vote on the bill, conceding to Republican demands for three-day period to read a final bill.

House GOP members had introduced a petition requiring the wait time for lawmakers to read all bills, which some centrist Democrats had signed, the Hill reports. The article quotes a spokesman for House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) who doubted the promise. “House Democrats actually voted to post the trillion-dollar ’simulus’ bill online for 48 hours before a vote and then broke that promise, so this should be taken with a large grain of salt,” said Michael Steel.

The Senate Finance Committee, which is in the midst of marking up Sen. Max Baucus’ “Chairman’s Mark” of his health care bill, defeated a similar amendment yesterday. 

To ensure that the Senate would actually know what they were voting on, Sen. Jim Bunning (R-Ky.) offered an amendment that would have required that actual legislative text, as well as a final Congressional Budget Office estimate of the cost of the bill, be posted for 72 hours on the Senate Finance Committee Web site for public review before the Senate Finance Committee could vote on its final passage.

The Bunning amendment was defeated on a largely party-line vote, with all Senate Democrats – except Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) – voting against it.

Tags: , , ,

Latest Research

September 24, 2009

Live from the Senate Finance Committee Markup …

Earlier this morning the Senate Finance Committee, during its markup of the “Chairman’s Mark” of the America’s Healthy Future Act of 2009, voted down an amendment that would have helped ensure that Americans can keep their current coverage.

The amendment offered by Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT) stated the following:

“The implementation of Americas Healthy Future Act of 2009 shall be conditioned on the Secretary of Health and Human Services certifying to Congress that this legislation would not cause more than 1,000,000 Americans to lose the current coverage of their choice.”

The intention was to put into law President Obama’s oft repeated promise that “If you like your health insurance, you can keep it.” However the amendment failed on a party line vote.

Tags: , ,