The “Fix it Later” Crowd
But what exactly is the evidence cited for accusations like “the plan is to pass basically anything, and then go and totally rewrite it when the budget spotlight is off” other than Megan McArdle saying it? It may exist, I genuinely don’t know. I’d be very interested in it.
Look, it’s hard to have “evidence” of something that hasn’t happened yet, but this fixing-it-later thing is something we’ve been reading from progressives just about EVERYWHERE. Like this, from TAP:
Liberals in Congress should also recognize that with either a 2013 or 2014 date for implementation, there will be time enough to revise the program before it goes into effect (indeed, time enough for the opponents to roll it back). Many of the specifics, such as the level of subsidies, almost certainly will be changed in the intervening years. And many of those specifics can be changed through budget reconciliation, which requires only 51 votes to pass the Senate.
And this, from Ezra Klein:
You take what you can get, and then you go back and get a little bit more. Do that for long enough, and you’ve got a pretty good bill.
Or this, from Gail Collins:
I only have one thought, which is that the Democrats should pass the health care bill now. If that means having the House pass the Senate version, fine. Even the stupid parts. Even the part about how Nebraska doesn’t have to pay its share of the Medicaid bills, which is so ridiculous that even Nebraskans are embarrassed.
They can fix it later.
Or this:
Pass universal coverage now, fix it later.
Or this:
There are many lessons to learn from the health care war that has raged over the past year. We’ll get to some of them below. But here’s the bottom line: Pass the bill, then improve it.
Or this from Krugman. Or this from Koch. Or, if you need to hear an actual politician talk about this, then here:
Stephen Lynch of the 9th district of Massachusetts, which (I haven’t crunched the numbers yet) probably voted for Brown, says, “If it comes down to the Senate bill or nothing, I think we are going to end up with nothing. I don’t hear a lot of support on our side for that bill. Folks are telling me I should vote yes and fix it later. You wouldn’t buy a car for a $1 trillion and have somebody tell you ‘It won’t run but we’ll fix it later.’ You know?”
And here’s another one:
“There is only one guarantee — that if we don’t pass something the notion of trying to put Humpty Dumpty together again is a real long shot,” said Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., son of the late senator. “If you understand the legislative process, it’s a lot easier to pass something and fix it later.”
And Obama himself told progressive congressmen just yesterday that he wants to revisit the idea of a pubic option after this bill passes:
Progressives aren’t without demands of their own. They are looking for all assurances that the Senate bill won’t pass without a companion reconciliation bill amending it. Obama assured the members he sees the two bills as companions.
“We don’t want to get trapped voting for the Senate bill as is without a full understanding that what he signs, and comes to his desk, are the two pieces of legislation, and the other part being the critical part being the reconciliation,” Grijalva said.
Obama also apparently pledged to revisit the public option in the future.
McArdle wasn’t making things up. The plan is to pass what they’ve got, and then change it.
Source: azspot
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stillsograteful reblogged this from soupsoup and added:
a little perspective, folks.
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Furthermore, the CBO employs constraints that almost everyone agrees aren’t realistic. It’s like me applying for an...
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series-of-contradictions reblogged this from think4yourself and added:
Reconciliations,first two for the rich, third one for Universal Health Care. azspot:Best. Graph. Ever.
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Can’t fight the numbers.
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It’s an impressive array you’ve pulled together. I looked at all of it. Nevertheless, I see very little here except...
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jeffmiller reblogged this from southpol and added:
Look, it’s hard...have “evidence” of something...hasn’t...
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emmawelles reblogged this from squashed and added:
And yet we still let Republicans tell us that they are the party of fiscal responsibility? AS IF. (I watched “Clueless”...
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