In the News > Historic U.S. health-care bill passes

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22 mars 2010|

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The U.S. House of Representatives passed a historic health-care bill late Sunday that will make coverage possible for more than 30 million uninsured Americans and end discrimination by insurance companies against people with existing medical conditions.

Legislators voted 219 to 212 in favour of the landmark legislation that has been debated on Capitol Hill for a year. The bill, previously passed by the Senate, didn’t receive a single vote from Republicans. It will now go to President Barack Obama for his signing into law, possibly as early as Tuesday.

“It is with great humility and with great pride that we tonight will make history for our country and progress for the American people,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said during her closing argument for health-care reform. “Just think, we will be joining those who established social security, Medicare and now, tonight, health care for all Americans.”

Following the vote, Obama said, “This is what change looks like.

“We proved we are a people capable of doing big things and tackling our biggest challenges,” he said. “We proved that this government — a government of the people and by the people —still works for the people.”

Overhauling of the health-care system is the most ambitious U.S. social program since Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society reforms of the tumultuous 1960s and Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal that emerged from the trauma of the Great Depression in the 1930s.

Resolving differences

The passage of the legislation was made possible by a last-minute deal struck earlier in the day between the White House and House Democrats who were holding out over abortion concerns.

The White House said in a statement that Obama would issue an executive order after passage of the health-care bill that would reaffirm current law banning federal spending on abortion, except in cases of rape, incest or a threat to the mother’s life.

Moments after the statement, leading abortion foe Bart Stupak, a Democrat congressman from Michigan, and six other anti-abortion Democrats said they would back the health-care bill.

“We’re well past 216,” Stupak told reporters, referring to the number of votes required to pass the bill in the House of Representatives.

The legislation would extend coverage to an estimated 32 million uninsured Americans, bar insurers from denying coverage on the basis of existing medical conditions and cut federal deficits by an estimated $138 billion US over a decade.

Congressional analysts estimate the cost of the two bills combined would be $940 billion over 10 years.

Amid talk of success for Obama’s efforts to expand health coverage to the uninsured, Republicans resolutely opposed the bill.

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