Three Democrats undecided about changing votes for health care

WASHINGTON — A top House Democrat said Sunday he believes Congress will pass a health care bill, but three fellow Democrats — including one from Washington state — who opposed overhaul legislation last fall aren’t committing themselves to backing President Barack Obama’s late push.

The House and the Senate approved different version of the legislation by narrow margins. House members are reluctant to approve the Senate plan on the promise that senators will tinker with provisions House members find objectionable.

Central to success of the bill is persuading some of the House members who voted against the original legislation to go along with the Senate bill.

Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., who heads the House Democrats’ campaign team, said House members are waiting to see the final plan and how the Congressional Budget Office analyzes its budget implications before deciding to support it.

“I believe it will pass. “Do we have a mortal lock? No,” Van Hollen said. “But I think the trend is in the right direction because people see that the status quo is absolutely broken.”

Three House Democrats who voted against the bill appeared open to considering changing their votes, but none of them committed to supporting the Senate legislation.

“The complexity, I think, worries a lot of people,” said Rep. Brian Baird, D-Wash. “And when you read these bills, they are very long, very complicated, because they build on an existing complicated system. And it’s not really a system. It’s a hodgepodge of (programs) … That worries a lot of people and, frankly, it troubles me.”

Rep. Jason Altmire, D-Pa., sounded the most optimistic. He said the Senate bill was better legislation overall, particularly in dealing with cost containment, but he added that he wanted to see the CBO’s analysis.

“In the end, I have to make a decision between passing this bill — this is the finish line — or doing nothing,” Altmire said.

Rep. John Adler, D-N.J., said he would not support a bill that doesn’t help businesses deal with rising insurance costs and doesn’t create more jobs.

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