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Pelosi: Congress Should Work Through Recess

by: Mike Soraghan  |  The Hill

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House Speaker Nancy Pelosi with House Democrats and patients who lack health care in Washington. She said that she is prepared to keep the House in session through the August recess to pass a health plan. (Photo: Getty Images)

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-California) on Wednesday said she's open to keeping the House in session through the August recess to pass its health care overhaul.

    "I think 70 percent of the American people would want that," Pelosi said. "I want a bill."

    That stance contradicts House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.), who said Tuesday that he didn't see any point in staying into August if Democrats haven't reached consensus on a bill by then.

    But Pelosi also said she believes she has the votes to pass the bill on the floor of the House. Still, she indicated it will be important for members to look at the Senate Finance Committee's version, which is not yet finished. That suggests she may change the House version to more closely resemble the Senate bill.

    The Senate Finance version should have broader appeal with Democratic centrists and Republicans, particularly if it does not include a government-run insurance option to compete with the private sector, as expected.

    The House health care plan is bogged down in the Energy and Commerce Committee, where seven Blue Dog Democrats are threatening to block it unless it is changed to cut more costs.

    But it faces other problems. Many members don't like the income surtax on the wealthy to pay for it, particularly freshmen from conservative districts. And rural lawmakers say the bill would build on a Medicare system that shortchanges rural doctors.

    Pelosi's comments came at a news conference held hours before President Obama's primetime news conference to promote the health care plan.

    Pelosi's news conference highlighted the stories of people who have racked up huge medical bills because they lacked adequate insurance.

    "There were days I prayed I wouldn't make it because I knew what I would face when it was over," said Molly Secours of Nashville. Secours had only "catastrophic coverage" when she was diagnosed with uterine cancer in 2007. She ended up with $25,000 in debt and faces foreclosure on her home.

  

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There's only one reason to

There's only one reason to keep the Congress in session through their recess, and it's not to pass a bill that has no public health insurance option. Nancy Pelosi may think she's helping someone, but from here it's not the American people, particularly those without health insurance. Just who is Ms. Pelosi trying to help with her selfless call? The notion that her goal is an "overhaul" of the current healthcare system is nothing less than a lie, it's misleading propaganda. Nancy Pelosi thinks too much, and doesn't do enough. What 70% of Americans want is single payer healthcare, not a corporate giveaway that does nothing to force the current system to compete on a level playing field. Americans are being sold a line of BS with Big Media's assistance, and Nancy Pelosi is it's face in our gov't. We can't let it happen this way, People. Call your reps to demand affordable healthcare that includes either a public insurance option, or preferably, single payer coverage as detailed in HR 676.

Since when is 'log-rolling'

Since when is 'log-rolling' and toadying to the corporations considered as "work"? Things will be right when the 'bought and paid for's' see to it that all the People have the same health care as the Congress.

The reason we can't have

The reason we can't have good health care for everbody in America is that the rich people took all the money in the last 8 years and they won't give it back, not a nickel.