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	Why I Voted for President Obama's Health Care 
	Legislation  
	By Dennis Kucinich 
	Al-Jazeerah, ccun.org, March 29, 2010 
	  
	What President Obama Didn't Say  
	The meeting that took 
	place on Air Force One was the fourth in a series of meetings that I had 
	attended with the President (Barack Obama) in the last few months. There was 
	a meeting on March 4 where the president called nine members to the 
	Roosevelt Room at the White House, and eight of the members had voted for 
	the bill when it passed the House last fall. I was the only one who voted 
	against the bill. I thanked the president for inviting me even though I was 
	a "no" vote. And in the more than hour-long meeting, the president covered a 
	lot of territory about what he thought was important to consider. I sat 
	quietly and listened carefully and took some notes. And at the end of the 
	meeting, you know, we thanked each other, and I left. 
  When I arrived 
	home that evening - March 4 - I still had this deep sense of compassion for 
	the president for what he was struggling with in trying to pass the bill. 
	And it was very clear to me that there was a lot on the line here - that he 
	didn't say. I was just thinking about the scope of American history, and 
	here's a president who's trying to do something, even if I don't agree with 
	him. I told my wife, "You know I kinda feel bad about the situation he's in 
	here. This is really a tough situation - his presidency is on the line." And 
	I had a sense of sadness about what I saw him grappling with. I still 
	maintained my position, still went forward in debates, arguing in meetings, 
	arguing against the bill because it didn't have a public option, didn't have 
	an opening for the states to pursue single-payer in a free manner. But at 
	the same time I kinda remember the feeling that I had about watching him as 
	he was dealing with this and, you know, trying to do what he felt was best 
	for the nation. 
  Now keep something in mind about my relationship 
	with President Obama: He and I campaigned together. A meeting with the 
	president is always important - he and I have met dozens of times, during 
	the campaign and since he became president - but we've met on many 
	occasions. Four or five times about health care. So the relationship I have 
	with him is a little bit different than other members who weren't on the 
	campaign trail with him and who hadn't developed a relationship with him 
	apart from the relationship that members of Congress ordinarily have with 
	the president. 
  So I was really looking at Barack Obama the man, and 
	thinking about his presidency. I've had differences of opinion with him on a 
	number of issues. But I understand how this is a pivotal moment in America, 
	and in his presidency. It's also a pivotal moment in American history. Of 
	course, I carried that awareness with me into the next meeting, which took 
	place on Air Force One on the fifteenth of March. Last Monday. So much has 
	happened in just one week, but during that time, there had been a lot of 
	speculation. I had done many interviews attacking the bill for its 
	well-publicized shortcomings and I was not relenting. After we met on Air 
	Force One, I didn't tell the president that "Look, I'm changing my position 
	- you got me." We didn't have that discussion. 
  My decision came last 
	Tuesday morning. There's a place where I go in the Capitol, just to kind of 
	reflect - before I have to make very important decisions. It's in the 
	rotunda - right next to Lincoln's statue. It's just a bench. And I went over 
	there early Tuesday morning, about seven in the morning when the sun was 
	just coming up, and no one else was around - there wasn't a sound in the 
	Capitol at that moment in the morning. And I just sat down there in a quiet 
	place and thought about this decision. And that's literally where I made up 
	my mind that, notwithstanding how much there was in the bill that I didn't 
	like, that I had a higher responsibility to my constituents, to the nation, 
	to my president and his presidency, to step forward and say, "We must pass 
	this bill. And we must use this bill as an opening toward a renewed effort 
	for a more comprehensive approach to health care reform." 
  The 
	Speaker and I also had many discussions about the bill. And I talked to her 
	briefly on Monday night and told her that I was giving some thought to the 
	appeals that she had made to me. And she said, "Oh, Dennis, you know, I just 
	hope that you'll be with us on this. This is so important." And I said, 
	"Well I'm giving some thought to what your concerns have been, Madame 
	Speaker." And on Monday night, I talked to my wife, Elizabeth - at home, it 
	was late. 
  Elizabeth asked how the day went. And I told her. I said, 
	"You know I'm giving this a lot of thought." I asked, "What would you think 
	if I decided to support this?" And she said, "Look, I'll support - whatever 
	decision you make, I'll stand behind you." And it was important for me to 
	talk to her because, you know, spouses live with the decisions that members 
	of Congress make. I mean, I have had occasion to ask Elizabeth's opinion, 
	and if she feels very strongly about something, I'm open to being persuaded. 
	That's just what happens when you have a partnership. So I asked what she 
	thought, and then I got up in the morning and headed right over to the 
	Capitol just to meditate on all the discussions that I'd had - with the 
	president, with Speaker Pelosi, with my wife, and with my constituents.  
	 And then after being in the rotunda for about fifteen minutes, I left 
	and went over to my office. That afternoon, I had a meeting with my staff, 
	and I told them that I was going to come out in favor of the bill. But I had 
	no discussions with anyone. And I did not notify the White House - the White 
	House found out about it when I announced it from the press gallery. Because 
	I just felt that this had to be a decision that I made on my own, without 
	any coaxing one way or another. I wanted even people in the White House to 
	know that this decision came ultimately from my own willingness to pay 
	careful attention to the concerns that the president, the Speaker, and 
	others had expressed to me. 
  This was a particularly hard decision 
	because the private insurance model is something that I don't support. As 
	I've said before, I don't take back any of the criticisms I've made of the 
	bill. This is reform within the context of a for-profit system. And the 
	for-profit system has been quite predatory - it makes money for not 
	providing health care. Now, the reforms in this bill may provide some relief 
	from that impulse. But, nevertheless, I have my work cut out for me now in 
	continuing the effort toward a much broader approach to health care reform, 
	which would include attention to diet, nutrition, complementary alternative 
	medicine, and empowering states to move forward with single-payer. 
  
	When it comes to analyzing the law we've just passed, it's hard to use terms 
	like good or bad. Because ultimately what was decisive for me was not the 
	bill, but rather the potential to create an opening for a more comprehensive 
	approach toward health care reform. If the bill were to go down, this whole 
	discussion about anything we might hope to do in health care in the future 
	is not going to happen in this generation. We had to wait sixteen years 
	after the demise of the Clinton plan to come to this moment. And the angst 
	that members are feeling about this bill - the temperature that's been 
	raised in the body politic over this bill, the characterizations of the bill 
	in a debate that's been quite distorted - all of those things argue against 
	bringing up another health care bill in the near future if this bill were to 
	go down. 
  Well I had to consider that. Because I have to take 
	responsibility for that. 
  Someone in the media said that I was 
	prepared to be the Ralph Nader of health care reform. If by the Ralph Nader 
	of health care reform someone means someone who holds crooked corporations 
	accountable, then that's a compliment. If they were referring to the 2000 
	presidential race, I think those who were closest in the Gore campaign 
	realize that that campaign was death by a thousand cuts. And to try to put 
	it all on Ralph Nader is, you know, historically glib. 
  But the 
	synthesis of that argument was this: People were telling me, "Dennis, you 
	are helping to gather momentum in the direction toward the defeat of the 
	bill." That's what people were telling me. That's what the message was. And: 
	"Is this something you really want to do?" And of course I have to consider, 
	when the vote is close, and however the final tally turns, but whether the 
	bill passes by one vote or five votes or more, the question of momentum was 
	something everyone was concerned about at that point. And people were 
	concerned that if I continued to maintain my position of hammering away at 
	the defects of the bill that I may cause its defeat. That's a legitimate 
	criticism. It's something that I had to take into account in terms of my 
	personal responsibility for the position that I held, and the impact that it 
	would have on my constituents. We always have to be open to people who may 
	hold a view that may be different than yours. Because you might learn 
	something. 
  And so as we came closer, and it appeared that I would be 
	in a pivotal position, I realized that the moment required me to look at 
	this in the broadest terms possible. To look at this in terms of the 
	long-term impact on my constituents, of the moment in history in which we 
	now stand, of the impact on the country, of the impact on the Obama 
	presidency, on the impact on the president personally. I had to think about 
	all of this. I couldn't just say, "Well here's my position: I'm for 
	single-payer, and this isn't single-payer, so I'm going to defeat the bill."
	
  Last year, seventy-seven members of Congress agreed that if the bill 
	didn't have a public option, they were going to vote against it. And there 
	were only two members who had kept that pledge when it was voted on the 
	first time in the House. And I was one of them. And the other one's no 
	longer in Congress. So I basically was the last man standing here. So I'm 
	aware of the debate that took place in favor of the bill. My concern was 
	that this bill was hermetically sealed to admit no opening toward a 
	not-for-profit system, no competition from the public sector with the 
	private insurers. Which makes the claims of a government takeover such a 
	joke. You know, those who claim that this is socialism probably don't know 
	anything about socialism - or capitalism. 
  Those claims are just part 
	of an effort to destroy the Obama presidency. And, of course, to produce 
	gridlock - so that nothing can happen. Because if this bill goes down, which 
	figured into my calculus - the bill goes down, we'll be gridlocked. We will 
	be unlikely to pass any meaningful legislation about anything. The 
	presidency will be weakened, the Congress will be in a place where the 
	leadership will be undermined. 
  But let's go deeper than that. We're 
	at a pivotal moment in American history, and in contrast to a crippled 
	presidency, I have to believe that this effort, however imperfect, will now 
	have a broad positive effect on American society, and make possible many 
	things that might not have otherwise been possible. Once this bill is signed 
	into law, more Americans are going to be aware of this as they ask, What's 
	in it for me? And as they become more familiar with the new law, more people 
	will be accepting this bill. The president will have a stronger hand in 
	domestic and international affairs, and that will be good for the country. 
	The Democrats will be emboldened to pass an economic agenda, which has been 
	waiting for this bill to pass. Wrong or right, as far as a strategy, the 
	White House invested so much in this health care bill that everything else 
	was waiting. Now, I think there's a chance that the party will regain some 
	momentum. And if it does, then the American people will finally have a 
	chance to see something done about creating jobs, about keeping people in 
	their homes, about helping small businesses get access to credit, which is a 
	huge problem right now. 
  And so I think that the pivot here could be 
	toward a very exciting time where the Obama presidency gets a chance to hit 
	the reset button. This is my hope, at least. 
  All of this went 
	through my mind as I sat in the quiet Capitol rotunda last Tuesday morning. 
	I thought about what could happen if I was willing to show some flexibility, 
	and to compromise for the sake of a broader progress. That was all part of 
	my thinking as I got the point where I stepped to the podium in the Capitol 
	to announce my decision. And right after I finished what I had to say and 
	left the room, the president called. I understood the importance of the 
	call, and he understood the importance of the decision that I made. There 
	was gravity in the moment. There is a lot at stake here. 
  I took it 
	all into account - everything that I hoped would happen if this were to 
	pass, everything that I hope will happen. And if those things come to pass 
	because of the small role I may have played in switching the momentum, then 
	my service in Congress has been worth it. 
	This article was sent by Dennis Kucinich to Al-Jazeerah on March 24, 
	2010. It was also published at:
  
	
	http://www.esquire.com/the-side/qa/dennis-kucinich-health-care-bill-032210
	 
	  
       
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