White House using base-closure process to extort Nelson?s vote on ObamaCare????

White House using base-closure process to extort Nelson’s vote on ObamaCare?

posted at 1:36 pm on December 15, 2009 by Ed Morrissey
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How desperate has the White House become to get anything passed under the name of health-care reform? According to Michael Goldfarb’s source on Capitol Hill, the Obama administration has targeted the last remaining Democratic holdout, at least among moderates — and they’re willing to damage national security to extort his support. The White House has threatened Ben Nelson (D-NE) with the closure of Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska if he opposes Reid’s latest version, despite its status as the headquarters of US Strategic Command:
According to a Senate aide, the White House is now threatening to put Nebraska’s Offutt Air Force Base on the BRAC list if Nelson doesn’t fall into line.

Offutt Air Force Base employs some 10,000 military and federal employees in Southeastern Nebraska. As our source put it, this is a “naked effort by Rahm Emanuel and the White House to extort Nelson’s vote.” They are “threatening to close a base vital to national security for what?” asked the Senate staffer.

Indeed, Offutt is the headquarters for US Strategic Command, the successor to Strategic Air Command, and not by accident.

STRATCOM was located in the middle of the country for strategic reasons. Its closure would be a massive blow to the economy of the state of Nebraska, but it would also be another example of this administration playing politics with our national security.
The Obama administration has little left to use for leverage. Why not national security? After all, if we’re going to bring terrorists into Illinois, what does it matter if we put the US Strategic Command on wheels for a few years?

One reason for the extortion attempt is that the latest version still hasn’t won any converts among the GOP. Susan Collins (R-ME), once considered a likely supporter of ObamaCare, announced today that the elimination of the public option and the Medicare buy-in isn’t enough to rescue the bill:
Today Collins told reporters that the bill under consideration in the Senate is “too deeply flawed for me to support it.”

“I don’t see voting for the current bill that is on the floor, even with the improvements that have been made,” Collins said. “I’m very leery of the impact of nearly $500 billion in Medicare cuts, particularly the cuts in home health care, which are completely counterproductive to the goal of lowering costs.”

Collins explained that she is continuing to work on the bill not because she intends to vote for it but because, “I think something is going to pass, and I would like to make that bill as good as possible, even if ultimately it’s not a bill that I can support.”
Collins’ colleague from Maine, Olympia Snowe, is not likely to contradict her, and no other Republicans will cast a vote for this monstrosity. Without the language prohibiting abortion funding, Nelson’s not likely to go for it, either, which leaves Reid at 59 votes — maybe. He may face some rebellion from the progressive side of his caucus, several of whom pledged not to vote for a bill without any kind of public option. Getting Lieberman on board may wind up creating just another problem for Reid … unless the White House intends on threatening more base closures and disruption for national security.

Update: Matt Lewis reported this first on his Twitter feed, apparently with a source other than Michael’s.

:+big-8+:+big-8+:+big-8+:+big-8+
 

The Seer

EOG Dedicated
Re: White House using base-closure process to extort Nelson?s vote on ObamaCare????

Do it my way or I will pull the trigger of this gun pointed at the USA's head military base


Great picture!
 
Re: White House using base-closure process to extort Nelson?s vote on ObamaCare????

Published Wednesday December 16, 2009

Johanns: Probe Offutt 'threat'


By Joseph Morton

WORLD-HERALD BUREAU

WASHINGTON - Sen. Mike Johanns, R-Neb., and 19 other GOP senators on Wednesday called for a hearing into reports that the Obama administration used the future of Offutt Air Force Base as bargaining chip in the health care debate, according to a press release by Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev.

Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., has flatly denied that Offutt came up in connection with the health care bill or any other piece of legislation. The White House also has described those reports as "absurd."

The group of Republican senators called for a hearing in a letter to Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, D-Mich., and the committee's top Republican Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

"Various media reports have stated that the Obama Administration would put Offutt AFB in southeastern Nebraska on a future BRAC list because of a vote on healthcare reform," the senators wrote in the letter. "While we recognize the importance of Offutt AFB as the headquarters of U.S. Strategic Command and the approximately 10,000 individuals that work there, we feel that this installation should remain open or be closed on its own merits."

Nelson is a crucial vote in the health care debate. Conservative pundits such as columnist Michelle Malkin have cited anonymous Capitol Hill sources in writing that Nelson was threatened with closure of the base if he failed to support the pending health care legislation. Nelson says those reports are being spread by partisan sources eager to defeat the legislation.
 

roscoe

EOG Veteran
Re: White House using base-closure process to extort Nelson?s vote on ObamaCare????

Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., has flatly denied that Offutt came up in connection with the health care bill or any other piece of legislation. The White House also has described those reports as "absurd."
 
Re: White House using base-closure process to extort Nelson?s vote on ObamaCare????

Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., has flatly denied that Offutt came up in connection with the health care bill or any other piece of legislation. The White House also has described those reports as "absurd."

We shall see after the investigation.

:cheers
 

scrimmage

What you contemplate you imitate
Re: White House using base-closure process to extort Nelson?s vote on ObamaCare????

Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., has flatly denied that Offutt came up in connection with the health care bill or any other piece of legislation. The White House also has described those reports as "absurd."


4) Last but not least, Ann Tatlock, CEO of Fiduciary Trust and now a board member of Franklin Templeton, had just arrived at a conference hosted by Warren Buffet at the Offutt Air Force Base (home of the U.S. Strategic Command Headquarters in Omaha, Nebraska) when the 9-11 attacks took place. Coincidentally, later that day President George W. Bush flew into this very same base on Air Force One for ?security reasons.? Even more chilling are the Offutt AFB ties to the CIA?s MK ULTRA experiments, Project Monarch, the Franklin Cover-Up, and the diabolical practices of Michael Aquino. (Type any of these words into a search engine for more information.)
Excerpt from:
http://globalresearch.ca/articles/THO404A.html



Bush on arrival. Airforce #1 not the only plane
on Offutt ...

 
Re: White House using base-closure process to extort Nelson?s vote on ObamaCare????

Haha. . .I only hope it's true. . .You reap what you sow. . .Waving the pom poms for the buffoon and Darth Cheney does have consequences in this world, as what is good for the goose is just as sweet for the gander. . .
 

brucefan

EOG Dedicated
Re: White House using base-closure process to extort Nelson?s vote on ObamaCare????

A HEALTH CARE BILL??

HOW THE HELL COULD YOU HAVE NOT SQUEEZED THIS CRAP IN THE OTHER CRAPULIS SPENDING BILS YOU HAD BEFORE THIS ! :doh1

PSST, BLUE HORSEHOE SAYS BUY GOLD :+waving-5


US Senate @ Work- Health Care Industry Special Provisions Money & Perks for States

<HR style="COLOR: #a93c3c; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #a93c3c" SIZE=1><!-- / icon and title --><!-- message -->Unconstitutional? You Betcha.


Your Senate at Work / The COST of History WSJ

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...wsreel_opinion

The following are examples of the special provisions added ro the Senate health-care bill, some at the last minute, to win 60 votes to allow the bill to proceed to debate and passage but, Blanche Lincoln and Evan Bayh must feel like saps. :

Connecticut: $100 Million for the University of connecticut Medical Center. Higher reimbursements for certain Hospitals under Medicare (Cost not disclosed)

Florida: Grandfather clause the Exempts Florida residents from losing medicare Advantage Benefits. COST: $3-5 Billion.

Louisiana: $300 Million in Medicaid subsidies to "certain states recovering from a medical disaster" (i.e. Katrina).

Massachusetts: $500 Million in higher Medicaid reimbursements.

Vermont: $600 Million in higher Medicaid reimbursements. $10 Million for Health Care centers.

Michigan: higher reimbursements for certain Hospitals under Medicare. (Cost Not disclosed)

Montana: Medicare coverage for individuals exposed to environmental health hazards in or around Libby, MT an Asbestos superfund site. (Cost Not Disclosed) Higher Medicare payments to "Frontier Hospitals and Doctors. (Cost Not Disclosed)

Nebraska: Exemption from the insurance fee for Nebraska Blue Cross/Blue Shield and Mutual of Omaha; and 100% Federal payment for new Medicaid coverage indefinitely at a cost of $100 Million each year.


North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming: All Higher Medicare payments to "Frontier Hospitals and Doctors. (Costs Not Disclosed)


Noteworthy points... US Senator Ben Nelson (D-NE) not only was a very costly vote in special privileges, but was the opposing senator to kill "Anti-Trust Laws" imposed on; Corporate Hospitals, Insurance companies, and Pharmaceuticals monopolies, for Senator Nelson's vote.


The Price of 'History'
Harry Reid delivers a bundle of special-interest favors.

Blanche Lincoln and Evan Bayh must feel like saps. The Arkansas and Indiana Democrats spent months caterwauling about this or that provision in the Senate health-care bill, then at 1 a.m. Monday they voted to speed its passage without getting so much as a lousy T-shirt.

In Harry Reid's Senate, this qualifies as dereliction of duty, as the Majority Leader said himself on Monday in defense of his frantic deal-making to get 60 votes. "I don't know if there is a Senator that doesn't have something in this bill that was important to them," Mr. Reid said at a press conference that offered an unintentional commentary on modern democracy. "And if they don't have something in it important to them, then it doesn't speak well of them."

James Madison, phone home.

Truth be told, even Tom DeLay must be jealous of Mr. Reid's handiwork. We summarize some of his most notorious political payoffs nearby, including the legendary $300 million "Louisiana Purchase" for Mary Landrieu, and $100 million for Chris Dodd's favorite Connecticut hospital.

But special attention should go to Senator Ben Nelson, who played hard-to-get the longest and in return for being the 60th vote won an exemption for Nebraska from paying any of the additional costs for the bill's Medicaid expansion, which is worth $100 million. He also won millions of dollars of exemptions from the $6.7 billion in health insurance fees for Nebraska-based companies like Mutual of Omaha.

This is the same Senator who declared a few weeks ago that "my vote is not for sale." Well, he never said: at any price.

At first, Mr. Nelson defended his Medicaid buy-off as a service to his constituents, two-thirds of whom tell pollsters they oppose the overall bill. But the lucre was denounced by Nebraska Governor Dave Heineman and Republican Senator Mike Johanns.

"Nebraskans don't want a special deal," said Mr. Johanns. "The special deal for Nevada was wrong, the carve-outs for Louisiana, Vermont, and Massachusetts are wrong, and the same applies to the backroom deal for Nebraska. All of the special deals should be removed. If the bill cannot pass without carve-outs, what further evidence is needed that it is bad policy?"

Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb.

But Iowa Democrat Tom Harkin replied that Mr. Nelson's Cornhusker kickback was merely an example all 50 states will soon follow. "Every Governor in the country is going to say, why doesn't our state" get that Medicaid deal, Mr. Harkin said, and the Nelson connivance is "going to be the impetus for" the federal government to pay 100% of the extra Medicaid costs for all the states.

And, sure enough, Mr. Nelson admitted yesterday amid a defensive near-meltdown on the Senate floor that "Three Senators came up to me just now on the [Senate] floor and said, 'Now we understand what you did. We'll be seeking this funding too.'" Mr. Nelson now says "it's not a special deal for Nebraska. It is in fact an opportunity to get rid of an unfunded federal mandate."
OpinionJournal Related Stories:

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You have to admire his political dexterity. But if having the feds pay for these Medicaid expansions is such a great idea, then why wasn't that part of the original bill? Answer: The $30 billion cost would be too high for all 50 states and would make the bill look even more expensive than it is, but as a bribe to buy off one or two Senators, it's acceptable. The other states will have to get theirs later, after the Reid bill has been passed under the fantastical ruse that it is "deficit-neutral." Taxpayers nationwide will pay sooner or later.

Meanwhile, the Reid bill's fine print also solves the mystery of Florida Senator Bill Nelson, who is no relation to Ben but is just as crafty. How could a Florida Democrat, who has built his career denouncing Medicare "cuts," vote for a bill that pays for a new entitlement for younger Americans by taking more than $400 billion from health-care for seniors?

His brilliant solution: Include a grandfather clause that exempts Florida seniors who currently have Medicare Advantage benefits from losing them. This little beauty is worth $3 billion to $5 billion. (Presumably Arizona, also the home to many retirees, didn't qualify because its two Senators are Republicans.)

This does mean, of course, that if you turn 65 next year and move to Florida and want Medicare Advantage, you don't qualify for the Nelson Advantage. So some seniors will be more equal than others. But at least Mr. Nelson was able to minimize the chance of a major senior revolt against his support for Medicare cuts.

Thus does your United States Senate, the world's greatest nondeliberative deliverer of special-interest favors, practice political medicine. Get used to it. As President Obama likes to say, it's "history" in the makin
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BCTTWR

EOG Dedicated
Re: White House using base-closure process to extort Nelson?s vote on ObamaCare????

Every time the chimp says this boondoggle is deficit nuetral, you can see his nose grow.
 
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