Anything but jubilant, President Barack Obama awkwardly kept a promise
Wednesday he made to assure passage of historic health care legislation,
pledging his administration would not allow the use of federal funds to
pay for elective abortions covered by private insurance.
Unlike Tuesday, when a beaming Obama signed the health care law in a
nationally televised ceremony interrupted repeatedly by applause, the
White House refused to permit coverage of the event. It occurred in the Oval Office in the
presence of a small group of anti-abortion Democratic lawmakers who had
extracted the commitment over the weekend.
Obama, a supporter of abortion rights, issued the executive order as
Senate Democrats drove toward final passage of a second health care bill, drafted
to supplement the first by sweetening benefits for seniors with high prescription drug
costs and for lower-to-middle income families who cannot afford
the cost of insurance.
The same measure includes a second triumph for the
administration on domestic policy. It generally strips banks and other
private insurers of their ability to originate loans to students, in
favor of direct government lending.
The government's savings would raise the maximum
amount needy students could receive in Pell Grants, and pump about $2.6
billion over a decade into historically black and Hispanic colleges. The
changes would mean the loss of billions of dollars for student lending
giant Sallie Mae as
well as large financial institutions such as Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America.
The bill passed the House on Sunday and it appeared Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid, D-Nev., had as many as 57 votes in hand for its approval,
far more than needed. Among 59 Senate Democrats, only Sens. Blanche Lincoln of
Arkansas and Ben Nelson
of Nebraska announced in advance they would oppose it.
Far outnumbered, Senate Republicans sought votes on
politically-charged proposals that, while potentially troublesome for
Democrats, were doomed to defeat.
Among them was a call by Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, to make sure none
of the bill's tax increases would fall on an individual with annual
income of less than $200,000 or a couple with wages of less than
$250,000 combined — taxpayers whom the president has vowed to shield.
Sen.
Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, offered an amendment to force Obama and
others in the government to obtain insurance coverage through new
purchasing exchanges created by the law, something the law already
stipulates for members of Congress and some staff. The White House
responded by issuing a statement saying Obama would enter the exchange
voluntarily so Grassley's amendment was unnecessary.
Obama's participation as president would be
contingent on his getting re-elected in 2012, since the exchanges won't
be up and running until 2014.
Taken together, the day's events amounted to mop-up
actions by the White House and Senate Democrats, one day after Obama
signed into law far-reaching changes in the nation's health care system that had eluded
presidents and lawmakers for a century.
At its core, the new law would expand health care to
32 million who lack it while cracking down on the insurance industry and
cutting federal deficits by an estimated $138 billion over a decade.
Most of the estimated $940 billion cost of the bill would pay for
assistance to help families with annual incomes of up to $88,000 pay for
insurance, although small businesses would also receive subsidies as in
incentive to offer coverage to their employees.
The two bills combined call for nearly $1 trillion in
higher taxes and Medicare cuts over 10 years, provisions that sparked
strong opposition from congressional Republicans, all of whom voted
against the bill's passage.
For the first time, millions of Americans would be
required to purchase insurance, and face penalties if they refused.
That requirement was at the heart of much of the
opposition to the legislation by Republicans, conservatives activists
and others, and 13 attorneys
generals have already filed suit to try to invalidate the law.
The
Democrats' drive to enact sweeping health care changes had appeared doomed as
recently as two months ago, when Obama took personal command of a
revival effort, working in concert with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and
Reid.
Passage wasn't assured until Sunday, a few hours
before the final vote, when Obama agreed to issue an executive order
specifying that he would not permit the use of federal funds to pay for
abortions except in the cases of rape, incest or if the life of the
mother was in danger.
The commitment, backed up by a draft of the order
that circulated, was enough to secure the votes of Rep. Bart Stupak,
D-Mich. and a few other holdouts.
As signed into law, the health
care bill says individuals who receive federal subsidies to
purchase insurance may purchase abortion coverage, but must do so by
writing a separate check from personal funds. Obama's executive order
commits the administration to issuing regulations making sure that
personal and federal funds are kept separate.
David Mikael Taclino
Inyu Web Development and Design
Creative Writer
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