Dingell takes gavel as House debates health plan
By The Associated Press
This article was published November 7, 2009 at 1:22 p.m.
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HEALTH CARE INTERACTIVES
WASHINGTON Democrats gave the gavel Saturday to the longest-serving House member ever as the chamber began debating legislation overhauling the country’s health care system.
Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., was given the honor of presiding at the start of what was expected to be a lengthy, contentious debate. Dingell joined the House in 1955, replacing his late father, and has introduced his father’s national health insurance bill every year since.
After Dingell banged the gavel for the first time, Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y., said he “has had reform of health care in his blood.”
Dingell, 83, said many lawmakers have worked on the issue and added, “the nation will be grateful to us all.”
With Dingell overseeing the proceedings, it took three hours of raucous debate for Democrats to prevail on an initial procedural vote as Republicans repeatedly interrupted Democratic speakers with parliamentary objections.
Tempers eventually cooled, and after the procedural vote, members of both parties gave Dingell a standing ovation as his turn to preside came to an end.







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PeteJC says... November 7, 2009 at 2:30 p.m.
A defeat of this initial bill will be a good start towards real reform that will involve existing health insurance companies, a mandate that all citizens be insured and a very limited public option where those deemed as uninsurable will be brought into Medicare. The republican bill is a start but it needs to be beefed up to provide coverage for all. Reform=YES, Gov-take-over=NO.
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