Acknowledging his amazement at the crowds gathered to debate health care at his town halls, Rep. Allen Boyd, D-Florida, faced three large gatherings on Monday with many questioners voicing skepticism about the proposals being debated in Washington.The biggest risk to Obamacare right now it a bill will be passed by the House and die in the Senate. That would effectively kill it for this congressional term.
"Never have I had this attendance … that is a good thing," Boyd said as he started his third event of the day.
Boyd, in his seventh term, represents a conservative area in northern Florida. A fiscal conservative, he is part of the group of House Democrats known as the Blue Dogs.
At the first event of the day in Cross City, he held up a copy of the bill passed by the Energy and Commerce Committee and embraced by the congressional leadership.
"I cannot support this bill in the version it is in now," he said. "We can do better. We can make it better."
He emphasized to the skeptical crowds that he will work to reduce quickly-rising medical costs; that any bill must not add to the deficit; and that Blue Dogs like himself fought to delay consideration by the full House of Representatives to allow members to hear directly from constituents during the August recess.
When a questioner, Ray Evans, said he believed the President wants to do too much at once and asked whether Boyd would "be willing to scrap everything" and start over to do pursue reform more incrementally, the congressman responded: "I think that is an excellent idea … we may end up there."
I hate to give the administration advice, but the smartest thing they could do now is scrap the whole enchilada, take a deep breath, and don't even look at again until January. Trying to do something in an election year will be difficult, but trying to do it now will be impossible. The issue is way too hot.
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