March 10, 2010
The health care reform bill passed by the Senate on Christmas Eve appears to be dead on arrival in the House, as seven anti-abortion Democrats intend to join the ranks of lawmakers who plan to vote against the legislation, Fox News has confirmed.
Seven new no votes would be enough to kill the Senate bill, and several more fence-sitting lawmakers are under pressure from both sides of the aisle.
Foremost among the seven new no votes is Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., whose anti-abortion amendment to the House version of the legislation got the bill passed in that chamber last year.
But because the Senate and House Democratic leaders weren't able to agree on joint legislation before losing their supermajority in the Senate, they have few options other than getting the House to pass the Senate bill and then change the law with a second bill that could pass with simple majorities.
The Senate bill, however, doesn't contain the same language as the Stupak amendment, which strengthened prohibitions on federal funding of abortion in any of the measures intended to expand health care coverage to millions of uninsured Americans.
'So unions get mountains of Obamacare waivers, but they can't budge for religious organizations? Creepy. '-@politicalmath
Patriot PostThe Boys Scouts of America was incorporated Feb. 8, 1910. Sir Robert Baden-Powell began the movement in England two years prior. A hero of the South African Boer Wars, Sir Baden-Powell...
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