http://briefingroom.thehill.com/2009/07/19/ross-counting-on-blue-dogs-to-block-healthcare-will-leave-right-sorely-disappointed/Ross: Counting on Blue Dogs to block healthcare will leave right 'sorely disappointed'
@ 2:16 pm by Michael O'Brien
Conservatives who are counting on Blue Dog Democrats to scuttle healthcare reform will be "sorely disappointed," one of the Blue Dogs' leading members said this weekend.
Rep. Mike Ross (D-Ark.), the chairman of the centrist Blue Dogs' healthcare task force, said that that the coalition would seek to "resuscitate" the House healthcare reform through amendments in the House Energy and Commerce Committee's markup of the bill this week.
"There's some folks from the right that have been calling my office very pleased that they perceive I'm trying to kill healthcare," Ross said during an interview with National Public Radio (NPR) on Saturday. "At the end of the day, I suspect they're going to be sorely disappointed, because none of us within the Blue Dog Coalition are trying to kill healthcare reform."
The House healthcare bill made it through mark-up in two committees this past week after having been unveiled on Monday of last week. Some centrist Democrats on the House Ways and Means and Education and Labor committees joined Republicans in opposing the effort.
"What we're doing is improving upon the bill; in no way are we watering down the bill," Ross said. "We're simply trying to force Congress to contain the costs, and for us to do anything less than that would be, in my opinion, watering down the bill at worst and sugarcoating it at best."
Blue Dogs have earned the enmity of some more liberal Democrats, especially on blogs, for not cooperating with Democratic leadership to pass healthcare reform.
For his part, Ross said that a final deal is fast approaching, but warned against what he termed "artificial deadlines."
"We're very close, and whether it happens August 1, or a day or two or a few weeks after August 1 — the American people are ready for us to slow down, and have time to debate these issues, and improve upon the final product, and actually have the time to read the bills we're voting upon," Ross said.