Financial Reform Chicken

“We’re very close to a deal,” Richard Shelby, the ranking Republican on the Senate Banking Committee said Wednesday. “We’ll take the next step,” intoned Senator Olympia Snowe, a prime target for aisle-crossing outreach. “Folks on our side of the aisle want a bill,” Bob Corker, a key GOP architect of portions of the Senate bill, drawled.

Majority Leader Harry Reid is having none of it. Jaded by a health care debate marked by endlessly moving goal posts and emboldened by a fresh political tailwind, the Nevada Democrat filed for cloture on the Dodd financial reform bill Thursday afternoon despite Republican objections that the move is premature and more negotiation is needed. The move sets up a procedural vote late Monday where the banking bill will need 60 votes, including at least one Republican, to move to full floor debate.

“I’m not going to waste any more time of the American people while they come up with some agreement,” Reid said. “The games of stalling are over.”

His intention is to, as Karen might say, Make Them Filibuster. (Can I say that? Do I owe royalties?)

Democrats feel they’re in a win-win situation. If the bill moves ahead, it’s one step closer to crossing an important item off the agenda. If the GOP obstructs, it’s fodder for “Party of No” taunting. Republicans maintain they’ll oppose the motion, and Mitch McConnell has a strong track record when it comes to holding caucus unity. But the incentive structure is much different than it’s been in recent battles on the Hill.

Why Olympia Snowe Won’t be There and Other Summit-Related News

Can you feel the excitement in the air? Cable news can. There was a flurry of health care-related news today, most of it summit specific. For starters, this morning, the White House specifically invited Olympia Snowe to the event. (She is the only Senate Republican to have cast a vote in favor of health reform [...]

The Week In Review and What’s Next for Health Reform

Word is that Majority Leader Harry Reid will unveil changes to the Senate’s health reform bill on Saturday morning. The timing is part of Reid’s effort to get a final vote on the legislation by Christmas Eve. Of course, even the most carefully plotted timeline means nothing without the 60 votes Reid needs to break [...]

Forecasting the Chances of Snowe

Olympia Snowe didn’t make a liar out of Max Baucus, who had been predicting for months that he would have at least some GOP support when passing his health care reform bill out of the Finance Committee (all along most of us read this as one person: Snowe). For the chairman this must be a [...]

Finance Committee Finishes Its Work

It’s all over but the vote. The Senate Finance Committee–the most closely watched of the five congressional panels that have jurisdiction over health reform, and the final one to weigh in–worked until after 2 a.m. this morning, finishing its markup of health legislation. Final passage is expected next week. The only suspense there is whether [...]

Health Care: Of Triggers and Timing

As Kate notes in her story today, yesterday’s defeat of the public option by the Senate Finance Committee has focused a lot of attention on the next big test, which is Senator Olympia Snowe’s amendment to put the public option on a “trigger“–that is, to establish one only as a fallback if private insurance companies [...]

Olympia Snowe

The senior Senator from Maine may well be the most closely watched person on Capitol Hill these days. In the upcoming issue of dead-tree TIME, I have a story that examines what drives her in the health debate and the stamp she has already put on the legislation. The question I couldn’t answer: Will she [...]

The Baucus Health Care Bill: A Work In Progress (Cont’d.)

I noted yesterday that Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus has signaled he is open to making adjustments to his bill, even before it gets to its first formal drafting session on Tuesday. (Stay tuned to Swampland, by the way, to follow the progress of the markup. We have some special plans for coverage in [...]

Health Care: The Public Option Fallback

Maine Senator Olympia Snowe’s idea of creating a public option as only a fallback if private insurance companies fail to produce genuine competition seems to be gaining currency at both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue at the moment. Today’s Washington Post has new details on how a “trigger” would work: