http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_IKcMl_a9A">Cue Europe.....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 reconciliation amendments that will become the shell that the Senate bill will be added to as an amendment. Presumably, as soon as they're done Chairman Spratt will go to the floor. As a privileged piece of legislation, he must deliver it directly to the floor where it'll be numbered and reported out. Under House rules, the report takes two calendar days before it can be referred to the Rules Committee.
7pm
The House Democratic caucus meets as Dems whip for votes.
Tuesday
*Pelosi's office said the CBO score is now expected Tuesday instead of Monday.
Once they have a bill, Dems need to post it online for at least 72 hours for members to review before a vote. They could post this Monday, but more likely it'll be Tuesday. And it'll probably be continuously tweaked as the bill is examined for potential Byrd Rule challenges, CBO scoring conflicts and other rules hiccups. This is not a House rule, but rather a Democratic caucus pledge, one that has been broken in the rush to vote in the past, so it's up to the discretion of the leaders if they want to observe it. But, given that they need as much time as possible to whip votes it seems likely that the full 72 hours will be observed.
Wednesday
Michael Scherer tells me that Obama aides expect that the president will meet with Senate and House Dems at some point this week. Not sure where or when -- I just put it in here as there was nothing else going on Wednesday and it seemed the most likely date.
Thursday
12:01am
The two-calendar-day reporting time expires and the Rules Committee can take up the bill. Traditionally, a rule takes one calendar day to ripen but past leaders both Republican and Democrat have gotten around that by including in the rule a provision that essentially declares that same day a whole new day (yes, this is White Rabbit time they'd be observing). If Speaker Pelosi chooses to she can bring up the vote Thursday, but again, she'll need time to whip members so a vote on Friday or Saturday is more likely.
Friday
The 72 hours run out from when the bill is posted online.
Read more:
http://swampland.blogs.time.com/2010/03/15/and-here-we-go-2/#ixzz0iIZkQiGc