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And Obama had a majority in the House, a super majority in the Senate and was held hostage by some of his own senators for the current bill. Since the supermajority prevents a filibuster, they could have passed anything they wanted. How quickly some forget, or didn't know.
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Eliminating Pre's is media brainwashing.
It's just trash talk...............Repub's are just getting rid of (or parts of) Obamacare. |
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quote from Nick Mulvaney... "“I’m not sure where they got the authority to do it, but, I’m sure the lawyers had vetted this and the president had the executive ability to do this, but, keep in mind, any executive order is going to be fairly limited. You need legislation to do big things. If we could have fixed health care with executive orders alone, we would have done that back in 2017,” Mulvaney told FOX Business' Maria Bartiromo on “Mornings with Maria.” Trump'''s new health care initiative '''fairly limited''': Mulvaney | Fox Business Ever since he was a presidential candidate, the administration has been promising the American people a “terrific,” “phenomenal” and “fantastic” new health care plan to replace the Affordable Care Act. But, in the 3½ years since he set up shop in the Oval Office, he has yet to deliver. And TWO of those years, one party ran both houses and could have done whatever they wanted |
No. A majority in the Senate does not mean you can do whatever you want to. For many legislative issues, you would need to have a supermajority (60 or more votes) to prevent a filibuster. The last time a party had a filibuster proof supermajority in the Senate were the democrats during Obama's first term.
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Nothing was put forward but you already knew that so why ask? If you go back and reread my post, I was responding to the wrong information in your post. One reason nothing has been put forward is probably because of the deadlock for many issues in Congress. For many divided issues, the threat of a filibuster is enough to prevent any legislative progress.
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The democrats had a supermajority on Christmas Eve 2009 when the bill was passed. You are correct that they lost the supermajority soon afterwards and couldn't revote on reconciliation but the Senate version of the bill would never have passed without the supermajority they held in 2009. The were arrogant enough to move forward with a partisan bill that was flawed. If not for John Roberts redefining the meaning of "tax" it would have been ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. Parts have already been dismantled because of it's flaws.
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