WASHINGTON - In a blow to the White House, the Senate’s top Democrat signaled yesterday that Congress might fail to meet a year-end deadline for passing health care legislation, leaving the measure’s fate to the uncertainties of the 2010 election season.
Majority leader Harry Reid of Nevada spoke as Democratic officials said it could be December before Senate debate begins in earnest on the legislation, months after senior lawmakers and the White House had hoped.
House leaders, on a somewhat faster track, pointed toward a vote this weekend on a bill to extend coverage to tens of millions who lack it, ban insurance industry practices such as denying coverage because of preexisting medical conditions, and generally slow the rate of growth of medical spending nationwide. The 10-year, $1.2 trillion legislation would extend coverage to about 96 percent of eligible Americans, and includes an option for consumers to purchase a government insurance plan, an attempt to put pressure on private firms.