Dems won't push child health measure again
WASHINGTON, Sept. 8 (UPI) -- U.S. congressional Democrats
won't try again to pass a controversial expansion of the Children's
Health Insurance Program, party leaders said Monday.
U.S. House Democrats couldn't muster the votes needed to
override Republican President George Bush's two previous vetoes of
the "SCHIP" expansion, and despite vows to force another showdown,
they now say they are scrapping plans for yet another try, The New
York Times reported.
"We are not going to change any votes on the children's
health insurance bill," House Democratic Caucus Chairman Rahm
Emmanuel, D-Ill., told the newspaper. "We still don't have enough to
override a veto. Those who opposed this bill can face the voters and
explain why they believe 10 million kids should not get health
coverage."
The move is significant because Democratic candidates for
Congress have used Republican opposition to the SCHIP extension as
campaign fodder. But Democratic leaders told the Times the cost of
the bill has increased, and Congress would need to find a way to
defray the extra cost by cutting elsewhere if it were passed this
year.
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