Conventional wisdom is that as president, Joe Biden will have a hard time getting much legislation through Congress because Democrats will have only a narrow majority in the House, and because Republicans' seem likely to keep control over the Senate. Conventional wisdom ignores the possibility that Republicans and Democrats could work together to draft and pass bipartisan bills. Members of Congress have succeeded at getting some health measures signed into law in recent years.
President Donald Trump and Congress have succeeded at zeroing out the Affordable Care Act individual mandate penalty, postponing the start date of the ACA excise tax on high-cost health plans, and enacting two bipartisan drug price bills: the "Know the Lowest Price Act of 2018" bill and the "Patient Right to Know Drug Prices Act" bill. For Biden, one major obstacle could be procedural issues: Trump is continuing to challenge the outcome of the Nov. 3 election in the courts, and by trying to persuade members of the Electoral College to vote for him. Assuming that Biden takes office in January, and that Republicans continue to have a narrow majority in the Senate, the easiest way for Biden to get legislation through Congress would be to focus on measures introduced by Senate Republicans, that just about all Democrats in the Senate can support, that relate to the federal budget. Focusing on broadly popular measures that were originally sponsored by Senate Republicans could, possibly, attract enough Republican votes in the Senate for supporters to cobble together a Senate majority. Senators normally need at least 60 votes to get a bill to the floor of the Senate. But senators can get budget packages to the floor with just 51 votes. A senator can squeeze almost any measure into a budget package, if the Senate parliamentarian rules that the measure is germane to the budget. One way to identify health policy initiatives with broad enough support to get through the Senate in budget package might be to look at bills sponsored or cosponsored by some of the Republican senators most likely to cross party lines to vote for a bill, such as Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska. For a look at some health insurance and health policy bills that look as if they could overcome partisan gridlock in the Senate, see the slideshow above. (Wiggle your pointer over the first slide to make the control arrows show up.) — Read 5 Top Biden Health Bill Gatekeeper Prospects, on ThinkAdvisor. — Connect with ThinkAdvisor Life/Health on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter.
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