Senate GOP could fuck up a wet dream. Latest Obamacare replacement gets shot down by parliamentarian.

Yssup Rider's Avatar
Seven years later... these stupid fucks just look stupider and stupider.

It's Obama's fault, you say?


http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/us_59...ushpmg00000009

Senate Referee Rejects Key Pieces Of Repeal Bill, Dealing Major Blow To GOP
Abortion provision is out, potentially making bill toxic for conservatives.


WASHINGTON —Efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act ran into big trouble on Friday afternoon, when the Senate parliamentarian announced that nearly a dozen key provisions violate special procedural rules that Republicans are using to pass their legislation.

The list includes a clause, which many conservatives consider essential, that would defund Planned Parenthood and block federal money from helping to pay for insurance policies that cover abortion. Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough also ruled out a six-month “lockout” period for people trying to buy insurance after they have let it lapse ― a key policy feature of the Senate bill that insurers say is vital to keeping markets stable.

The parliamentarian’s office indicated that it would still be reviewing other parts of the Senate proposal ― including provisions that would allow insurers more flexibility to vary premiums by age or to offer plans that leave out benefits such as mental health and maternity care that current law considers essential.
And the Parliamentarian hasn’t even had a chance to consider a new amendment, proposed by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), that would allow insurers to offer some plans not subject to rules guaranteeing coverage for people with pre-existing conditions.

Politically, the biggest blow for Republicans is the ruling that a provision prohibiting funds from being used to purchase insurance policies that cover abortion. That rider was key to House conservatives accepting their version of the legislation, and Freedom Caucus Chairman Mark Meadows suggested that, without that prohibition, the bill could not pass the House on the way back from the Senate.

“The elimination of the Planned Parenthood [funding prohibition] is very puzzling since it passed the parliamentarian’s scrutiny in the past,” Meadows told HuffPost Friday afternoon, “but today’s ruling as it relates to the life issue will make passage almost impossible.”

The ruling matters because Republicans are trying to pass legislation through the budget reconciliation process, a special procedure in which measures are not subject to a filibuster in the Senate. That makes it possible to pass a bill with just 50 senators rather than 60, with the vice president breaking the tie ― something essential for Republicans, because they have only 52 seats and are not trying to pass their bill with Democratic support.

But if reconciliation makes it possible to pass a bill with fewer votes, it also imposes strict rules on what a bill may include. Legislation must have a significant economic impact and cannot merely change policy ― otherwise it is subject to 60 votes. (This is called the “Byrd Rule,” named after former Democratic Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia.)

The parliamentarian is the arbiter of those rules. If the parliamentarian decides a provision does not conform to the guidelines for reconciliation, Democrats can (and surely would) demand that the provisions be subject to normal voting procedures ― in other words, subject to a filibuster that would require 60 votes to overcome.
bambino's Avatar
Seven years later... these stupid fucks just look stupider and stupider.

It's Obama's fault, you say?


http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/us_59...ushpmg00000009

Senate Referee Rejects Key Pieces Of Repeal Bill, Dealing Major Blow To GOP
Abortion provision is out, potentially making bill toxic for conservatives.


WASHINGTON —Efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act ran into big trouble on Friday afternoon, when the Senate parliamentarian announced that nearly a dozen key provisions violate special procedural rules that Republicans are using to pass their legislation.

The list includes a clause, which many conservatives consider essential, that would defund Planned Parenthood and block federal money from helping to pay for insurance policies that cover abortion. Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough also ruled out a six-month “lockout” period for people trying to buy insurance after they have let it lapse ― a key policy feature of the Senate bill that insurers say is vital to keeping markets stable.

The parliamentarian’s office indicated that it would still be reviewing other parts of the Senate proposal ― including provisions that would allow insurers more flexibility to vary premiums by age or to offer plans that leave out benefits such as mental health and maternity care that current law considers essential.
And the Parliamentarian hasn’t even had a chance to consider a new amendment, proposed by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), that would allow insurers to offer some plans not subject to rules guaranteeing coverage for people with pre-existing conditions.

Politically, the biggest blow for Republicans is the ruling that a provision prohibiting funds from being used to purchase insurance policies that cover abortion. That rider was key to House conservatives accepting their version of the legislation, and Freedom Caucus Chairman Mark Meadows suggested that, without that prohibition, the bill could not pass the House on the way back from the Senate.

“The elimination of the Planned Parenthood [funding prohibition] is very puzzling since it passed the parliamentarian’s scrutiny in the past,” Meadows told HuffPost Friday afternoon, “but today’s ruling as it relates to the life issue will make passage almost impossible.”

The ruling matters because Republicans are trying to pass legislation through the budget reconciliation process, a special procedure in which measures are not subject to a filibuster in the Senate. That makes it possible to pass a bill with just 50 senators rather than 60, with the vice president breaking the tie ― something essential for Republicans, because they have only 52 seats and are not trying to pass their bill with Democratic support.

But if reconciliation makes it possible to pass a bill with fewer votes, it also imposes strict rules on what a bill may include. Legislation must have a significant economic impact and cannot merely change policy ― otherwise it is subject to 60 votes. (This is called the “Byrd Rule,” named after former Democratic Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia.)

The parliamentarian is the arbiter of those rules. If the parliamentarian decides a provision does not conform to the guidelines for reconciliation, Democrats can (and surely would) demand that the provisions be subject to normal voting procedures ― in other words, subject to a filibuster that would require 60 votes to overcome. Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
Your Medicaid plan might be safe. You worthless:

PIG
dilbert firestorm's Avatar
the reconciliation bills is a stupid idea. alls this to avoid a filibuster.

looks like they're filibustering themselves in the process anyway. this process is just bizarre.

Get rid of the filibuster, and theres no need for the stupid reconciliation bill.
Yssup Rider's Avatar
Let me guess,

EATLER OINKED again!

I agree. THESE GOP cowards are looking more and more like useless wastes of oxygen..
dilbert firestorm's Avatar
Let me guess,

EATLER OINKED again!

Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
there you go fat boy assup!!!
Yssup Rider's Avatar
Send it to your butt buddy, EDdie the Limpdick Lardass. Maybe he can squeeze a royalty out of it..... before he eats it.
bamscram's Avatar