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Senate Banking Committee chairman
Christopher Dodd (D) spoke at a briefing Thursday after
he halted bipartisan talks on financial regulatory
overhaul and set forth plans to move forward on his own.
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Will Healthcare Reform Nix any Senate
Bipartisanship on Immigration Reform?
WASHINGTON (By Gail Russell Chaddock,
CSMonitor) March 13, 2010
GOP senators who have been willing to
work openly with Democrats say the
process for healthcare reform could end
the prospects for bipartisanship
elsewhere. Possibly at stake in the
Senate: comprehensive immigration reform
and financial regulation.
Democrats have found very few
Republicans to work with since taking
back control of Congress in 2007.
But GOP senators who have been willing
to work with Democrats openly on big
bills say a bid to move healthcare with
only Democratic votes will end
bipartisan prospects for other
legislation.
After a meeting with President Obama on
Thursday, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R) of
South Carolina said healthcare could
sink prospects for comprehensive
immigration reform.
I expressed, in no uncertain terms, my
belief immigration reform could come to
a halt for the year if health care
reconciliation goes forward, he said in
a statement.
Reconciliation is a procedure that
allows legislation to pass with a simple
majority, instead of the 60 votes now
typical for major bills in the Senate.
With the election of Sen. Scott Brown
(R) of Massachusetts, the Democratic
caucus has 59 members one short of the
count needed to end a Republican
filibuster.
For more than a year, healthcare has
sucked most of the energy out of the
room. Using reconciliation to push
healthcare through will make it much
harder for Congress to come together on
a topic as important as immigration,
Senator Graham added.
Republicans who have backed
comprehensive immigration reform in the
past, such as Sen. John McCain of
Arizona, are not actively working with
Democrats on this bill. Violence on the
Mexican border, Senator McCain says,
makes it imperative to first find a
solution to border security. Mr. Obama
said Thursday his commitment to
comprehensive immigration reform is
unwavering.
The timing of the healthcare votes, said
Sen. Bob Corker (R) of Tennessee, also
forced a premature end to bipartisan
negotiations on financial regulation in
the Senate Finance Committee.
In fairness, there's no question the
White House, politics, and healthcare
have kept us from getting to the goal
line. No question, he said in a press
briefing on Thursday.
This week, Sen. Christopher Dodd (D) of
Connecticut, who chairs the Senate
Banking Committee, announced the panel
will begin marking up financial reform
regulation next week.
"Each week, we let it slip a little bit,
because we thought we could get a little
further along in developing a consensus
product, said Senator Dodd at a
briefing on Thursday.
The committee
print, or the proposal, that I'll offer
on Monday does reflect a lot of the
ideas Bob Corker and others have brought
to the table. But clearly, we need to
move along.
Dodd dismissed suggestions healthcare
had poisoned the water for his financial
reform bill. Put aside healthcare
reconciliation and everything else: The
moment has arrived to put down a
proposal, he added.
According to Sen. Charles Schumer (D) of
New York, the chairman of the Senate
Finance Committee, Sen. Max Baucus (D)
of Montana, met with Republicans some 60
times in a bid to produce a consensus
product on healthcare, without success
hence the move to reconciliation.