Posted By Steve Adcock On March 16, 2010 (6:14 am) In Voices and Choices

Nancy Pelosi suggested that she is considering a move that would allow passage of the nearly $900 billion health care proposal without a vote, indicating the unpopular legislation probably cannot be passed legitimately.

Pelosi “would rely on a procedural sleight of hand: The House would vote on a more popular package of fixes to the Senate bill; under the House rule for that vote, passage would signify that lawmakers “deem” the health-care bill to be passed,” according to a Washington Post report.

“The tactic — known as a “self-executing rule” or a “deem and pass” — has been commonly used, although never to pass legislation as momentous as the $875 billion health-care bill.”

Opponents of the health care bill naturally criticized the suggestion, accusing the House Speaker of circumventing the will of the people and avoiding responsibility for passing a clearly unpopular piece of expensive legislation.

Some oppose the legislation’s tax increases to help fund the new bureaucracy, others refuse to vote for a bill that includes federal funding for abortions and many simply believe it overreaches the federal government’s constitutionally-authorized hand.

Small government activists and believers in liberty and freedom for the American people strongly oppose any government encroachment into the health care of the American people.  Nationalized health care is not constitutional, according to most, and will undoubtedly make virtually every facet of our health care industry more expensive.

WASHINGTON (AP) – House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer declined to say Wednesday if Democrats have enough votes to pass historic health care legislation, but hinted that they’re poised to use an arcane parliamentary process to get it done.

Hoyer’s Republican counterpart, Rep. Eric Cantor, acknowledged that such a process is permissible under House rules. Under the procedure, a Senate-passed health bill would be “deemed” to have passed if House members voted in favor of a rule governing a separate bill with amendments to it.

Cantor, R-Va., said he couldn’t understand why Democrats would use such a parliamentary detour with a bill of this magnitude and reach.

Asked on ABC’s “Good Morning America” to say if he had the 216 votes necessary to pass the legislation in the House, Hoyer, D-Md., replied, “I don’t have a precise number. Having said that, we think we’ll get the votes. … We think we will have the votes when the roll is called.”

Appearing on the same show, Cantor asserted: “They don’t have the votes yet … The problem is, there’s still a lot of uncertainty surrounding this bill. The American people think there’s a better way.”

The partisan parrying has increased in intensity in the past few days as President Barack Obama and House and Senate Democratic leaders have increased pressure to at last resolve the health care issue, which has been before the Congress for over a year. Obama is due to leave Sunday on a trip to Asia, and he has said he wanted it finished by then.

In the interview Wednesday, Hoyer, D-Md., maintained that support for the 10-year, $1 trillion health care remake has gone up in recent weeks.

“We’re going to have a clean up or down vote on the Senate vote,” he said. “That will be on the rule. … This is not an unusual procedure.”

Cantor retorted that “this is a process that you can avoid a direct up or down vote on a bill.”

Democratic Party chairman Tim Kaine voiced confidence on NBC’s “Today” show that the bill will pass, saying “we’re in the last throes of labor before something good happens. … We’re not taking anything for granted but we feel good about the outcome.”

Asked if “deem and pass” is being used to provide cover for Democrats worried about voting for the measure, Kaine replied, “I don’t think there’s any cover to be found. Everyone’s accountable.”

At stake is a bill that would cover some 30 million uninsured people, end insurance practices such as denying coverage to those with a pre-existing conditions, require almost all Americans to get coverage by law and try to slow the cost of medical care nationwide. The comprehensive legislation could affect nearly every American, from those undergoing annual checkups to people facing major surgery.

Activists on both ends of the political spectrum are energized. Tea party volunteers, who rallied Tuesday in Washington, are planning to flood congressional offices with e-mails opposing the legislation as a step toward socialism. And some on the political left have joined in calling for the bill’s defeat because it leaves out a federal insurance option.

White House aides said Obama and senior advisers are making clear to lawmakers that they will not be left standing alone in a difficult election year if they cast a tough vote for health care overhaul. The aides spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private meetings.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is trying to keep wavering lawmakers in line, meeting with them individually and in groups. And she summoned female Democrats to her office for a meeting Wednesday morning.

Read the Marin IJ article here.

Read the Daily Breeze article here.

Read the NBC article here.

Read the NBC article here.

Read the Marin IJ article here.

Read the Fox News article here.