U.S. Senate health bill clears final hurdle

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – Senate Democrats cleared the  last 60-vote hurdle on U.S. President Barack Obama’s healthcare  overhaul yesterday, virtually ensuring final passage of its  version of the biggest health policy changes in four decades.    For a third straight day, Democrats mustered the 60  party-line votes needed to keep the healthcare bill on track  for passage today over unified Republican opposition.

The vote on final approval, which requires a simple  majority in the 100-member Senate, is slated for 7 a.m. EST  (1200 GMT) today.

Passage in the Senate would set up potentially tough  negotiations in January to iron out differences with the House  of Representatives, which approved its own version on Nov. 7.

“It’s been a long, hard road for all of us,” Senate  Democratic leader Harry Reid told reporters. “We stand a few  short steps from the most significant finish line we’ve had in  Congress for many decades.”

The overhaul, Obama’s top legislative priority, would lead  to the biggest changes in the $2.5 trillion U.S. healthcare  system since the 1965 creation of the government-run Medicare  health program for the elderly.

The bill would extend health coverage to more than 30  million uninsured — covering 94 percent of all Americans —  and halt industry practices such as refusing insurance to  people with pre-existing medical conditions.

It also would require most Americans to have insurance,  give subsidies to help some pay for it, and create state-based  exchanges where the uninsured can compare and shop for plans.  Many of the major provisions would not kick in until 2014. Passage of the bill is critical for Obama, whose political  standing and legislative agenda could hinge on its success.  Obama’s public approval ratings have dipped to about 50 percent  in many polls as the acrimonious debate dragged on.

“Considering how difficult the process has been, this is an  end product that I am very proud of and is greatly worthy of  support,” Obama told National Public Radio, dismissing  liberals’ concerns that compromises with Senate moderates had  weakened the final version.

Democrats hope to complete House-Senate negotiations and  send the bill to Obama before his State of the Union message in  late January, although previous deadlines in the healthcare  debate have been missed repeatedly.

The House-Senate negotiations could be difficult, with  clashes looming on a government-run insurance plan, which is in  the House bill but not the Senate one, and competing approaches  on taxes and the use of federal funds to pay for abortions.