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In the tug-of-war to gain the 60 votes needed to pass health care reform, it appeared Wednesday night that the Democratic leadership's concessions to Sen. Joe Lieberman may have cost the health reform bill a crucial supporter.
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders told Fox Business Network on Wednesday that "as of this point" he cannot vote for the Senate health care bill -- but the senator hedged his bets, saying "we'll see" what happens.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid removed a Medicare buy-in option from the health bill on Monday, following Lieberman's announcement that he would join a Republican filibuster of the bill if it included the Medicare expansion. Lieberman's vote was seen as crucial to getting the 60 votes needed to overcome filibuster.
But Sanders' comments Wednesday indicated that the Democratic caucus may have gained the support of one of its most conservative members at the price of one of its most liberal. (Sanders, a longtime favorite politician in Vermont, is a self-described "democratic socialist.")
"As of this point, I'm not voting for this bill," Sanders told Fox's Neil Cavuto. "I’m going to do my best to make this bill a better bill, a bill that I can vote for, but I’ve indicated both to the White House and the Democratic leadership that my vote is not secure at this point. And here is the reason. When the public option was withdrawn, because of Lieberman’s action, what I worried about is, how do you control escalating health care costs? How do you give competition to the private insurance companies who are raising rates outrageously every year?"
"So they gain Joe Lieberman and lose you," Cavuto said. "That sounds like a loss to me."
Perhaps realizing he may have walked into a conservative talking point, Sanders responded: "Well, we'll see what happens."
The following was broadcast on the Fox Business Network December 16, 2009, and uploaded to the Web by ThinkProgress.
video: <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkuSzhNKvHw>
<http://rawstory.com/2009/12/sanders-not-voting-bill/>
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