Use sidecare reconciliation, with the Senate going first

All you need to do is figure out what fixes can be passed through reconciliation that would make the bill palatable to 218 House members. Speaker Pelosi and Majority Leader Reid are discussing that now. Then you have the Senate pass that reconciliation bill and send it over to the House. The House passes the reconciliation fixes and the underlying Senate bill. The President signs them (in the correct order), and viola! You’re done.

So the key question is this: what needs to be in the package of fixes that can qualify for reconciliation, get 50+ votes in the Senate, and get 218 votes in the House?

Counting the votes

How do we get 218 votes in the House? Well, starting from the 220 who voted for the House bill; you're clearly not going to pick up any Republican votes on the House side, but the some of the Democrats who voted no the first time around are probably in play.

Abortion language = Nelson



It appears unlikely that reconciliation can be used to change the abortion language, so the Nelson language will prevail. For some House members who supported Stupak, that’s a dealbreaker. You will lose some votes, likely between 10 and 20.

The freshmen and sophomores



Vulnerable freshmen and sophomores look at the Massachusetts race and the polling and conclude that to vote for the Senate bill as is against the wishes of their constituents is to guarantee they won't be re-elected. (It's really hard to argue for a mandate with no real choice or competition. Add that to pissing off the unions with the excise tax, and the giveaways to Nelson and Landreiu, and you have one gigantic PR problem.) So you lose between 10 and 20 votes there.

Progressives and the pro-choice caucus

Now let’s be clear about something. The House progressives and pro-choice caucus members who voted yes for the House bill (which is pretty much all of them) are fundamentally team players. They were team players the first time around, they’re likely to be team players again the second time around. So they can likely all – or nearly all – be brought home by leadership again.

But looking at the numbers and the members it’s possible to please with a fix in reconciliation, it would appear that it’s probable that all of the remaining votes you need to win back are from vunerable freshmen and sophomores.

How do you convince Betsy Markey and Tom Perriello and Steve Driehaus and Frank Kratovil and Mary Jo Kilroy et al to vote for the bill? Show them that it'll help their re-election chances.

The public option is (ironically) the key

So far, the only thing polling has shown works is public buy-in to a government healthcare program – either the public option or a Medicare buy-in. Polling done in September by Lake Research showed that a mandate with no public option was acceptable to only 34% of the public; add in a public option, and support nearly doubles to 60%. In December when CBS News/New York Times asked, "Would you favor or oppose the government offering some people who are uninsured the choice of a government-administered health insurance plan – also known as a ‘public option’ – that would compete with private health insurance plans?" 59% of voters were in favor.

If you want to win back the voters, give them the one thing they clearly understand is a win for them over the insurance companies: the option to choose a public plan.

Oh – and it appears that a significant portion of the problem in Massachusetts was that the Democratic base wasn’t excited. They were downright frustrated, in fact. Want to give the Democratic base some change they can believe in? Then give them the public option they’ve been clamoring for.

Either a public option or a Medicare buy-in can be done through reconciliation. Sen. Harkin claimed 52 Senate votes for the public option over the summer, and it appears it was only Lieberman who killed the Medicare buy-in at the 60-vote threshold.

Look, I know the DC conventional wisdom has been that the public option is dead, and that the Medicare buy-in is a non-starter. The excuse was always, "We can’t get 60 votes for it." Guess what? Now that it’s clear they’re going to have to use reconciliation, they don’t have to get 60 votes.

So what do we do now?

Pick up the phone and call your Senators and Representatives. Tell them you want them to use reconciliation to fix the bill, then for the House to pass both the fixes and the bill. Tell them you want a public option or Medicare buy-in as part of the fix.

You can use the toll free numbers

1-866-338-1015

1-866-220-0044

1-866-311-3405

Or you can go to http://www.congressionalplan.com where we've conveniently provided not only your personal congressfolks' phone numbers but also given you tools to send an email. Ask your friends to send emails and call. Activate everyone you can. Our window of opportunity here is short...