Senate tentatively agrees to remove public option Wrote:Senate may drop public option
PRIVATE-SECTOR ALTERNATIVE Reid says he is optimistic about bill after deal
By Shailagh Murray and Lori Montgomery
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Democratic Senate negotiators struck a tentative agreement Tuesday night to drop the controversial government-run insurance plan from their overhaul of the health-care system, hoping to remove a last major roadblock preventing the bill from moving to a final vote in the chamber.
Under the deal, the government plan preferred by liberals would be replaced with a program that would create several national insurance policies administered by private companies but negotiated by the Office of Personnel Management, which oversees health policies for federal workers. If private firms were unable to deliver acceptable national policies, a government plan would be created.
In addition, people as young as 55 would be permitted to buy into Medicare, the popular federal health program for retirees. And private insurance companies would face stringent new regulations, including a requirement that they spend at least 90 cents of every dollar they collect in premiums on medical services for their customers.
The announcement came after six days of negotiations among 10 Democrats -- five liberals and five moderates -- appointed by Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) to work out differences between the two camps on the public option and other pressing issues. Appearing in the Capitol with Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), the leader of the liberal faction, and Sen. Mark Pryor (D-Ark.), representing moderates, Reid hailed the deal as a broad agreement that has the potential to "overcome a real problem that we had" and push the measure to final Senate vote before Christmas.
"Not everyone is going to agree with every piece," Reid said. But when asked whether the deal means the end is in sight after nearly a year of work on President Obama's most important domestic initiative, he smiled. "The answer's yes," he said.
According to a Democrat briefed on the talks, the deal represents only an agreement among the 10 negotiators to send the new package to congressional budget analysts, not an agreement to support its elements. One of the negotiators, Sen. Russell Feingold (D-Wis.), quickly issued a statement criticizing the deal.
"While I appreciate the willingness of all parties to engage in good-faith discussions, I do not support proposals that would replace the public option in the bill with a purely private approach," he said. He added, however, that he will base his vote "on the entirety of what is in the bill, and whether I think the bill is good for Wisconsin."
Democrats must also win the approval of several key lawmakers who have not been involved in the talks, including Sens. Joseph I. Lieberman (I-Conn.) and Olympia J. Snowe (Maine), the only Republican who has voted in favor of the Democratic health initiative. If the Senate approves the agreement, it will face a huge obstacle in the House, where Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has fought hard to preserve a public plan in the face of opposition from House moderates.
If the deal holds, it will represent a major breakthrough on one of the most contentious issues of the health-care debate, settling a dispute between moderates wary of excessive government intrusion into the private sector and liberals determined to create a strong competitor able to curb the most egregious abuses in the private insurance industry.
"It may be different from what was previously included in the bill," said Reid spokesman Jim Manley, "but it accomplishes the same goals as a so-called public option."
Wow. I wasn't expecting this. Very nice upgrade. I'm now wondering if they added lip movement to the characters when they talk.
I also wonder if they went ahead and finished up the lost "camera" feature using the XBox camera. I figure that Miyamoto's face will be missing, so the first thing I'd do with the camera is put it right back in there... though maybe a different expression...
This isn't that recent, probably from last year or so, but I don't think I knew about it... infamous NES publisher Wisdom Tree has flash versions of their NES games on their website that anyone can play. They seem to flicker even more than the NES games do, but if you really want to play some Sunday Funday in Flash, well, you can.
(As you may or may not recall, the original version of Sunday Funday was Menace Beach, which is on the Maxi 15 cart that I have. I beat the stupid game for some reason... so frustrating!)
Yeah, mostly it's people talking in Japanese with no subtitles. Still, might be worth watching... there's not much gameplay in it, but there is a bit after 3:30.
... Yes, using the exact same logo style as SSFII... not being too subtle in how SFIV is a SFII upgrade game, are they?
Anyway, there are more coming, but the six new characters seen in this video are the ones already announced, Cody, Guy, T. Hawk, Adon, Dee Jay, and Juri. Rumors are that there are a bunch more, perhaps including Ibuki, Dudley, and Makoto from SFIII... we'll see. Hopefully they're in, this game badly needs some SFIII characters. :)
The only disappointing thing is that no PC version of this one has been announced yet, only PS3/360. The original SFIII was on PC... hopefully this is eventually as well. SFI, SFII, Super SFII, Super SFII Turbo, SF Alpha, and SF Alpha 2 were on the PC, but then another one didn't show up on PC until SFIV...