Excerpts
What a difference a day makes. And, you know, the signing of a sweeping health care bill.
Last week, the atmosphere in the Capitol--and indeed, all across political Washington--was tense, and ominous. Democrats hadn't rounded up all the votes they needed (and ultimately found) to pass health care reform, and Senate Republicans knew it. They kicked up as much dust as they could to scare House members into killing their own bill. Fixing the health care bill with reconciliation would fail, they warned over and over again, and Dems would be stuck having enacting an unpopular reform.
Today, that's all gone.
It started last night when Senate parliamentarian Alan Frumin sided with the Democrats over the Republicans' first major objection to the reconciliation bill. Republicans tried to get a major tax amendment stripped from the package on the grounds that it violated the Byrd rule...and they failed.
Today, Democrats are more confident than they've been in months. And while the Republicans haven't completely surrendered, they're clearly not the hard charging health care kamikazes they were weeks ago, when Democrats were ready to wave the white flag.
And appearing on CNBC yesterday evening, Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK)--one of the Senate's fiercest opponents of reform--threw in the towel. "We'll put a few holes in it, but basically it's going to come through here because they've done a good job crafting it.... We're going to have a difficult time making changes to that reconciliation bill."
At least one Republican gets it. GOP, you LOST!
with Keith Olbermann
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