Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva, co-chairman of the 80-member House
Progessive Caucus, reiterated his position that any health care
legislation needs to include a government plan to be meaningful.
Asked to react to the passage of the Senate Finanance Committee
bill earlier today, Grijalva's office emailed me the following
statement, attributed to the congressman:
"While I applaud the Finance Committee for completing its work
on the bill, I remain concerned that it does not include a
robust public option. I remain committed to getting the best
bill in the House that we can get so that we have a strong
negotiating position in conference. Today's Senate action does
not reflect the country's high approval ratings for a public
option, and I believe that any meaningful health care reform
must include that vital element to increase access and bring
down costs."
This raises a few questions. Could liberals insist that a House
bill includes a government plan, but ultimately compromise when
the bill is being reconciled with the Senate version? And will
Blue Dogs stay united to block liberals from even being able to
get a government plan passed in the House?