Al Frumin’s Bad Day

In the middle of a meeting in the early evening Wednesday on – what else? – reconciliation, the Senate Sergeant-at-Arms Terrance Gainer interrupted proceedings to speak with the Senate Parliamentarian. Though neither man would discuss what was going on, reports soon emerged: Tea Party protesters were planning to picket the Parliamentarian’s home. It has not been an easy week for Al Frumin, who instead of going home to be with his family spent all night in the Senate ruling on Republican challenges to the Democratic health care reform reconciliation amendments.

The reconciliation process has launched the non-partisan civil servant into the public eye. Republicans have questioned his integrity (a bit ironically since the man was appointed by Trent Lott) and this morning he’s not exactly popular with Dems. Frumin ruled during the all-night vote-o-rama session that two small GOP challenges to the bill were valid. Sixteen lines of text pertaining to the student lending provisions were struck from the measure, forcing Dems to send the bill back to the House for final passage. Identical legislation must pass both chambers before it can be signed into law by the President.

The Senate is expected to wrap up reconciliation by 2pm today, sending the bill back to the House. The lower chamber invoked a rare one-day rule in order to consider the amendments asap and pass them out tonight before they leave town for the two-week Easter recess. When Obama signs the amendments into law it’ll bring an end to final chapter of the Democrats’ year-long saga to enact health care reform. It’ll also give poor Mr. Frumin a chance to go home, get some sleep and return to a life of blessed anonymity.

Senate Democrats had hoped to avoid a final lob across the Capitol by just passing a clean bill. For more than two weeks a core group of staffers from leadership, the Budget Committee and the Finance Committee have been meeting to review language that would pass the Byrd Rule sniff test – a standard that requires that all provisions be germane to the underlying budget. The Dem strategy was to hold their caucus unified against any GOP amendments – forcing Democratic senators to vote against some fairly tough stuff like prohibiting sales of Viagra to sex offenders – while carefully constructing the legislative language to avoid another House vote. They succeeded in the former but failed in the latter. Thanks to a Democratic senior aide involved in the talks here a list of some of the casualties along the way – provisions that were cut as non-germane during the crafting of the bill:

Public Option

Ryan Grim sees an opening. Don’t count on it. At least, not now and not nationally: UPDATE: David Waldman sees one too.

The GOP Storm on Health Care Begins to Subside

With the help of TIME’s Katy Steinmetz: The last few weeks Senate Republicans were all sturm und drang.  “The American people are getting tired of this crap,” Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican told ABC’s This Week. “If [Democrats do reconciliation], it’s going to poison the well for anything else they would like to achieve [...]

Reconciliation Bill

Text is here. No, I haven’t read it yet. (The English-language version is the committee report, also linked above.)

Health Care: Making It All Add Up

There’s a real chicken-and-egg conundrum going on up on Capitol Hill. Lawmakers are clamoring to see the final health care legislation. But their leaders can’t settle on a bill until they know it gets a favorable “score” from the Congressional Budget Office. But the Congressional Budget Office can’t issue its number until it has a [...]

And here we go…

Ladies and gentlemen, start your engines. Here’s a brief guide to the health care final sprint (at least the schedule that we can predict) in the House over the next week: Monday 3pm This afternoon the fun will begin with an anticipated Congressional Budget Office score followed by* a House Budget Committee markup of the [...]

“This City is the City of the Perishable”

Those are Nancy Pelosi’s words today on why she wants to get health reform done as quickly as possible. But even among Hill reporters, there’s some confusion over what procedurally will happen this week. Democratic leaders, including Pelosi, are keeping quiet about their precise parliamentary strategy for three reasons. One, if they telegraph exactly what [...]

Wake Up, Health Care Spectators – It’s About to Get Interesting

There has been a lot of intrigue on the Hill today about what’s happening in the health reform saga. For those of you dozing off, perk up. Next week is shaping up to be a big one. * Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid officially informed Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, via letter, that Senate Democrats [...]

The GOP Campaign to Scare House Dems

Is anyone else feeling a bit of déjà vu? This stage in the health care legislative battle feels, to me at least, a lot like the period just before Christmas. Remember the constant threats from Republicans that they would use all the parliamentary tools available to indefinitely stall a final vote on the Senate health [...]

Obama Asks for “Up or Down Vote”

Today’s speech by President Obama was not the first in which he’s urged passage of comprehensive health care reform, but he’s hoping it will be his last. We’ll see. Flanked by health care workers and wearing a bipartisan purple tie – a rarity for him – President Obama delivered remarks that carried a theme of [...]