Health Care Battle Intensifies Despite Baucus' New Proposals

Senate Finance Committee chairman's $856B proposal has yet to gain Dems support.

ByABC News
September 17, 2009, 7:32 AM

Sept. 17, 2009— -- It is a health care bill that had the most promise for gaining bipartisan momentum and came closest to what President Obama called for in his speech last week. But Sen. Max Baucus' ambitious 10-year, $856 billion proposal fell with a thud Wednesday on Capitol Hill.

Republicans predictably denounced the bill, but more troubling to the White House is the barrage of criticism from Democrats over the bill proposed by Montana's Baucus, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Finance Committee.

Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., warned that the bill would slap a "big, big tax" on middle-class Americans.

"It's a very dangerous idea," Rockefeller said Tuesday, referring to the 35 percent excise tax that would be imposed on insurance companies for high-cost plans -- on premiums greater than $8,000 for individuals and $21,000 for family plans.

The senator was called to the White House Wednesday to meet with the president to talk privately about his objections to Baucus' health care plan. Emerging from the Oval Office, the West Virginia senator at first refused to say what the two had talked about.

"I was alone with the president, and you don't breach that confidence," he told reporters."I will if we talk in the Capitol, but I won't here. It's just because we agreed that ... whatever went on there is not to be spoken about."

But, back on his turf on the Hill, he released a statement -- without going into specifics -- saying, "I have made clear I cannot vote for this bill in its current form."

Liberal groups had even tougher words for Baucus' proposals.

Justin Ruben, executive director of MoveOn.org, called the bill a "dream come true for the insurance industry."

"The Baucus bill will not solve the health care crisis that plagues millions of Americans, and fails to meet the basic tenets on successful reform laid out by President Obama," Ruben said in a statement. "The insurance companies have found their champion in Sen. Baucus. The only good news is that the senator stands nearly alone in supporting his bill."

The National Coalition on Health Care expressed its "deep disappointment" and others had even harsher words.