Pelosi says Senate health bill cannot pass House

House Majority Leader Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-MD)(L-MD) speaks at a press conference where a plan to deal with executive compensation at companies which received capital under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) was announced on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 18, 2009. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts

House Majority Leader Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-MD)(L-MD) speaks at a press conference where a plan to deal with executive compensation at companies which received capital under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) was announced on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 18, 2009.

Credit: Reuters/Joshua Roberts

WASHINGTON | Thu Jan 21, 2010 4:00pm EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on Thursday she did not think the Senate's version of healthcare reform had enough support to pass the House of Representatives without changes.

"I don't see the votes for it," Pelosi told reporters, adding congressional leaders would take their time to find the right approach to passing a healthcare reform bill this year.

"In its present form, without any change, I don't think it's possible to pass the Senate bill in the House," she said.

Pushing the Senate's version of the healthcare bill through the House was an option considered by Democrats after Tuesday's Republican victory in a Massachusetts Senate race cost them their crucial 60th Senate vote needed to pass the measure.

But some House Democrats have objected to several provisions in the Senate bill, including a tax on high-cost insurance plans that is opposed by labor unions and a less-restrictive policy on using federal funds to cover abortions.

Democrats have limited options on how to proceed on the healthcare bill, President Barack Obama's top legislative priority, without 60 Senate votes, and have been divided on how to achieve final passage.

Pelosi said "everything is on the table," but congressional leaders would pause to find the right course. "We're not in a big rush," she said.

With the November congressional elections looming, Democrats are anxious to turn to proposals to create jobs and bolster the economy and to stop talking about a healthcare bill that polls show is unpopular with the public.

"There's a strong view in both caucuses that we want to do some good things on healthcare and the question is how: how much and how quickly?" Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer told reporters. "I don't think we want to do healthcare the next three months."

Other options include putting together a scaled-back bill and using a parliamentary procedure called reconciliation for some of the legislation's core elements. The reconciliation process requires only a simple 51-vote majority in the Senate but is limited to issues with a budgetary impact.

Both of those approaches could take more time than Democrats want to spend at this point, because they want to address the other major issues. "I wouldn't say there is a 'the' top option right now. There are two or three," Schumer said.

House and Senate Democratic leaders had been negotiating to merge the healthcare bills passed in each chamber into one version that could be passed again and sent to Obama.

Both bills would extend insurance coverage to more than 30 million uninsured Americans, create exchanges where individuals can shop for insurance plans and bar insurance practices like refusing coverage to people with pre-existing conditions.

(Reporting by Donna Smith and David Morgan; Writing by John Whitesides; editing by Philip Barbara)

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Comments (10)
markson wrote:
It is amazing how quickly the democrats are changing their tone through the other side of their mouths. Now Pelosi is “not in a big rush” and Schumer “I don’t think we want to do healthcare the next three months” and “there are two or three” “other major issues.” There have been major issues FOR MONTHS!! and they willfully did little. Instead they did everything trying to ram through the healthcare bill. They are not fit to govern(to rule,really). The only option we,the people,have is to VOTE THEM OUT!

Jan 21, 2010 1:28pm EST  --  Report as abuse
BartenderJoe wrote:
I must admit, I was not highly overjoyed with the Bush Administration, but give me a Republican one any day, aside from these Liberal, Socialist Democrats. They have turned a deaf ear to the American people, and I think it is coming back in full force to haunt them.

I can only hope that they won’t be allowed to continue their destruction of our American way of life. They try, sometimes succeeding, in taking our Constitution and trampleing it into the mud.

Jan 21, 2010 2:10pm EST  --  Report as abuse
billyjack13 wrote:
Maybe if they would take some of the PORK out of the bill, it might pass…
but I don’t think we have anybody smart enough, or willing, to do that on capitol hill….
we’re all idiots, for choosing idiots to represent us…

Jan 21, 2010 2:28pm EST  --  Report as abuse
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