General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Obama administration quietly approves new Obamacare loophole benefiting insurance companies. [View all]merrily
(45,251 posts)The lobbyists streamed to the WH as soon as Obama got in. (I would guess they were meeting with him even before that. Daschle sure was, but let's stick to the record.) The ACLU tried to show the public what was going on, given that Obama had campaigned on no secret negotiations of ACA--put it on C-Span, he said. And the WH fought the ACLU every step of the way, including moving the meeting out of the WH, to places that did not keep visitors logs.
People who make the claim you're making never point to all the efforts that Obama made to get Congress to pass the public option. Nor to any version of the bill that the WH sent Congress that included a pubic option. The Democrats had more than enough votes to pass the bill.
By the spring of 2009, Obama was not only not stumping to get people to cry out for the public option, for all the good that would have done--polls showed over 70% in favor. Rather, he was scolding those who were being activists for it.. A female doctor got detained by police for asking someone on the White House grounds to get a note to Obama about the public option. She was on Bill Moyers talking about it.
She was not the only one. Many were on TV at the time, complaining that only the anti-public option forces were welcome at the WH and only one view was welcome.
The delay was allowing Susan Collins and the industry to make the bill even worse than it was from the get go. And, when the WH really did not have enough votes--when Brown was elected--they went to reconciliation, which they could have done from the jump. Avoiding reconciliation from the jump was not about the law or the best interests of the American people. It was about Obama not wanting the Republicans to be able to claim that it was a partisan bill--which it was anyway, and which they claimed anyway.
Sorry, pwnmom, but the facts do not support your claim, even a little. Neither does the "he's not a king" bit.
P.S. Sorry, I have to break off for now and get to my responsiblities at home and on the job.