UPDATE 2: Baird says he is 'no' vote on health-reform bill
• Published November 06, 2009
U.S. Rep. Brian Baird has put out a statement, saying the House health-care bill due for a vote tomorrow is better than earlier versions. But he cannot vote for H.R. 3962 without seeing more numbers on costs.
Republicans have been taunting Baird over whether he would be a "lap dog" that would "roll over" for Speaker Nancy Pelosi on the issue. Click here to see the Republican National Committee's lap-dog match game.
Baird's statement took a more sober look at the bill and issue. It looks like without his vote and other Democrats like U.S. Rep. Adam Smith, D-Tacoma, on the fence the Democrats may delay their vote to Sunday or later.
Here is Baird's full statement:
Washington, D.C.— I strongly believe there is a need for health care reform and I have offered my own proposal for how this should be accomplished. The bill before the House is a result of thousands of hours of effort put in by members of Congress and their staff, plus the unprecedented input from the public on all sides of this issue. Clearly, people care about how we deliver and pay for health care in this country and there is a need and opportunity for change.
In comparison to the initial draft of H.R. 3200, a number of improvements have been made. To name just a few, the current bill would allow negotiations for prescription drugs under Medicare D, promote alternatives to malpractice litigation, and allow for cross state agreements to purchase cross state insurance (something especially relevant to border districts such as my own). There are also elements that could at long last correct the Medicare payment disparities that disadvantage our state, and the bill would end the anti-trust exemption long enjoyed by insurance companies.
All of those changes are commendable, but there are still reasons for concern. The most important of these is the simple fact that we do not yet have reliable estimates of how this legislation will impact the premiums paid by people who already have insurance.
This week I spoke with Nancy-Ann DeParle, the President’s chief health advisor and Doug Elmendorf, the director of the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). Although some prominent economists have asserted that premiums on average may go down relative to what they would be without this bill, the CBO has yet to complete its analysis of the issue. Furthermore, just yesterday, the chief actuary for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) said he did not think a cost estimate of the House bill would be available before the scheduled vote.
This is no small matter. To insist that members vote on this legislation without having cost estimates of Medicare and Medicaid impacts by CMS or an estimate of premium impacts from the CBO seems premature and unwise.
Precisely because this matter is so important, it is critical that we do things right, and know what we are doing. At present, unfortunately, I do not believe we have answers to fundamental questions.
Another troubling matter is how the legislation will be brought to a vote. As of this writing, only one amendment will be allowed from the Republican side. No other amendments, by either the majority or minority members, will be allowed. I believe that is a mistake. For a matter of this importance, and on which reasonable people can and do disagree, there ought to be more opportunity granted for amendments on both sides.
For these reasons, until more information is available on premium estimates and Medicare impacts, I will vote against the legislation in its current form. I will wait to make a decision on final legislation until this critical information becomes available and when the House and Senate together produce one bill.
One of Baird's Republiacn opponents in the 2010 race just put out this statement, saying he'll hold a press conference in Olympia to push Baird to vote against the H.R. 3962:
Olympia, WA - David Castillo will be in front of Brian Baird's Olympia office tomorrow for a Press Conference to remind the six-term incumbent that the majority of voters in the 3rd District do not support Nancy Pelosi's health care bill.
"While Brian has been a supporter of a Universal health care system in the past, I and the voters of this district want him to hear our voices clearly as we oppose this sort of thinly-veiled attempt to move our country closer to a government-run system," states Castillo. "Additionally, this bill does nothing to control health care costs and saddles our children with more unsustainable debt."
Castillo, a financial advisor with Edward Jones, will also speak about his free-market solutions for reforming America's health care system.
UPDATE: Castillo put out another statement tonight saying he'll cancel the press conference in light of Baird's decision to vote against the bill. I'm posting the text of his statement in a separate item.
@Nyx.CommentBody@