Time for health-care reform to be finished

Reports from the nation’s capital this week suggested the United States House of Representatives and Senate are one step away from passing sweeping health-care reform legislation. But well more than a year after the process began, there may still need to be some wheeling and dealing.

The final negotiations come at a time when Democrats in the House and Senate have already  passed their own versions of health-care reform — in November and December of last year. A series of fixes to each bill is expected to take place, followed by a reconciliation process that will result in one final bill. If it sounds complicated, that’s Congress for you.

The final hurdles now involve Democratic leaders Harry Reid in the Senate and Nancy Pelosi in the House putting in last-minute efforts to convince their colleagues that passing this legislation is crucial for America. “Wavering� Democrats are worried, it is widely reported, that passing the health-care bill might hurt their chances of getting re-elected in November.

Reid, Pelosi and their fainthearted colleagues ought to know that Democrats’ chances of getting re-elected have already suffered a blow because they are perceived as a party that can’t get anything done. If health-care legislation finally does pass, Americans will still be angry that it took so long to do it, but they will be happy to see it finished and the debate over. If the Republicans want to use the issue in November, so be it. This is no time to be cowardly.

Any Democratic senator or congressman who stands in the way at this point ought to be publicly lambasted as a self-serving obstructionist who is unfit for office. That sense will certainly creep across the country to Democratic constituencies that will be powerful voting forces in November.

Democrats should also stand up to the so-called “grassroots� Tea Party movement, which is really just a wave of hysteria propagated by the Fox News channel in order to gain conservative votes. The real grassroots effort happened last year when a nation participated in a historic presidential election and Americans expressed their desire for real change, including substantial health-care reform.

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