The U.S. House of Representatives passed two bills relating to health care reform Sunday night – the Senate’s sweeping reform package that President Obama signed into law Tuesday morning, and a budget reconcilliation bill that increases health care affordability that is expected to pass in the Senate this coming weekend.

Feel free to express your feelings in the comments. I’m largely going to stay out of it – let’s just say that this fence-sitting Kucinich Democrat is a little puzzled why (1) Republicans are so vehemently opposed to, and (2) Democrats are so proud of, what is essentially a RomneyCare health care plan. (I’m especially puzzled by Mitt Romney’s opposition to it.)

What I find more interesting at the moment is how Brooklyn put this thing over the top. Needing 216 votes to pass, the Senate bill was approved by only four votes. Which means the six Representatives with Brooklyn constituents could make it or break it. Five of the six voted in favor, led by Jerry Nadler (Sunset Park, Borough Park, Bensonhurst, Brighton Beach, Coney Island, and Manhattan) and Anthony Weiner (Sheepshead Bay, Gerritsen Beach, Marine Park, Mill Basin, Bergen Beach, and Queens).

Weiner’s stock rose considerably over the course of the debate (which has been going on for about three ages of Middle Earth). He was once considered a candidate for the 2009 Mayor’s race, but he opted to stay in Congress in the wake of term limit extensions that allowed Bloomberg to run again. That political calculation will pay off quite nicely for him – his early cheerleading for Medicare-style universal coverage, his insistence on public option insurance as a bare-minimum alternative, and his visibility on TV and on the House floor won over liberal progressives nationwide. (And I don’t think the fact that he, along with the rest of the Democratic left, got rolled by the Corporate Welfare wing of the party will hurt him with voters down the road.)

Michael McMahon, whose district covers Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights, Gravesend, and Staten Island, was the lone Democrat in the New York City delegation to vote against the bill. And the White House is reported to be pressuring donors to cut him off. Labor and progressive groups are promising a primary or third-party challenge from the left. I guess I feel like they’re wasting their time. McMahon’s district – dominated by Staten Island – has a registration edge for Democrats, but it leans Republican in actual elections. It’s why Bush men like Vito Fossella held the seat in the past. In Michael McMahon, district voters have found a politician who is their perfect representative – a Democrat who leans Republican. So I don’t think McMahon will be facing any serious fallout, either with Democratic primary voters or his district at large.

(Photo: U.S. House of Representatives)

 

McMahon (Official)This Tuesday, October 20, from 10am to noon, Congressman Michael McMahon (D-Staten Island & Brooklyn) will hold a town hall on the topic of health care reform at the Shore Hill Community Room (Shore Rd. and 90th Street).

Rep. McMahon held a town hall on Staten Island earlier this month. I know someone that attempted to attend, and was turned away because the auditorium had already been filled. Even among those left outside, according to this anonymous Friend of BK Southie, emotions and tensions were running high.

For those of you that haven’t been keeping score at home, there is a single health care bill in the House that is believed to have, just barely, the support of the 218 Representatives needed to pass the bill. There are six bills in the Senate, five of which have the strong public option that has been at the core of the debate, but the option-less Finance Committee bill is the one that has the most attention and possibly the favor of Majority Leader Harry Reid, who has control over the merging process. There’s no question that the Senate bills have the 51 votes needed to pass outright, but 60 votes are needed to end debate, leaving the bills prone to filibuster if all 40 Republicans are joined by any one Democrat in a procedural vote.

House Leader Nancy Pelosi is said to be looking for more support so that the House bill passes with a comfortable majority… enter Congressman Michael McMahon, one of roughly 20 undecided House Democrats.

Tuesday’s town hall is inexplicably and inexcusably in the middle of the morning. I realize there are plenty of people who can make a midday appointment like that, but I would think such an important and high-profile issue would deserve a prime time slot to accommodate people with day jobs (especially since the Staten Island town hall was in the evening).

I wish I could attend. Mike McMahon is almost my Congressman! And if I moved to the other side of the street, he would be! Funny, that gerrymandering thing. Perhaps another Friend of BK Southie (apparently, one with very flexible hours) can fill me in on the details.

P.S. 26 days between the last post and this one. Oops. Sorry about that, but I gotta go now. I have a kid’s room to paint.

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