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Despite his stated reasons, only Kucinich knows for sure, but here's a guess. Washington is notorious for pressuring, intimidating, and/or bribing members of Congress for support. Kucinich may have been told, either vote yes or face a well-funded fall primary challenge that could succeed given the power of deep pockets and deceptive ads. It's a prospect no member of Congress relishes. They could also take away his Government Reform Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats and International Relations.
Whatever the reason, he may have tipped the balance with House, then Senate votes, imminent, perhaps as early as Sunday, March 21. Going first, it's believed the House will use a controversial "self-executing rule" for a package of Senate bill fixes to "deem and pass" the entire bill that would otherwise fail. The Senate will then consider the revised bill through "reconciliation," requiring a simple majority to pass. Self-executing has been used many times before, but never for a bill impacting health care for everyone, amounting to one-sixth of the economy.
It also bypasses the 1985 Byrd Rule that restricts reconciliation to budget revisions according to provisions under Section 313(b)(1) of the 1974 Congressional Budget Act.
What's at stake? Plenty!
House and Senate bills will ration care, enrich providers, and make a dysfunctional system worse. Hundreds of billions of Medicare cuts will harm seniors. Most others will pay more, get less, and millions will remain uninsured. According to an earlier AMA estimate, those covered "will face higher premiums, deductibles, copayments and coinsurance, effectively reducing the scope of their coverage," what Wendell Potter explained above.
Business Week magazine acknowledged it last August saying, "No matter what specifics emerge in the voluminous bill Congress may send to President Obama this fall (or now), the insurance industry (and drug cartel) will emerge more profitable." Quoting an unnamed Senate Finance Committee staffer, "The bottom line is that health reform (will) lead to increased revenues and profits," and for doubters, check current insurance and drug company stock prices for confirmation.
Relevant International Law
Adequate health care is a human right, not a commodity for those who can afford it.
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