Line item voting
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- Save a Koala, deport an Australian
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Line item voting
Lurker said in the MA thread that he didn't think Line Item voting was a good idea. To avoid derailing too much, I'm just wondering why it isn't. It solves almost all the problem Clinton tried to get line-item vetos for and does it without going outside the constitution. Lawmakers can say exactly what they did and didn't vote for and it eliminates riders.
I guess I just don't see the downside.
Dd
I guess I just don't see the downside.
Dd
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Re: Line item voting
Vote for a provision, then vote against funding it.
Oops.
Oops.
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Re: Line item voting
Is has been put forth in the past (I believe by Klast) that not having pork provisions.....which would surely get voted down.......would inhibit the ability of legislation to get passed.
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Re: Line item voting
The thing is, it doesn't actually happen that way. The government must pass legislation or they'll find themselves out of a job at the next election. It would have an effect of removing the funding side from the legislation side, but that just lumps all the revenue collection into more central budget bills. Legislators aren't just going to vote against everything because it doesn't contain pork - if there's no pork to be had then they'll quickly adjust and find better ways to judge whether legislation is good for them. Mostly, it means that legislation becomes a lot more concise because no elected official wants to sit through all 1000 pages of line items if something can't be passed as a whole.
Dd
Dd
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Re: Line item voting
Repeating what I said here:
Line item voting would be a horrible idea, allowing Senators to vote yes on the easy and popular provisions while voting no on the unpopular ones. And just because something is unpopular or difficult doesn't mean it isn't necessary. For example, forcing insurance companies to take people with pre-existing conditions is popular and mandates are not, but both are absolutely required for reform to work.
Line item voting would be a horrible idea, allowing Senators to vote yes on the easy and popular provisions while voting no on the unpopular ones. And just because something is unpopular or difficult doesn't mean it isn't necessary. For example, forcing insurance companies to take people with pre-existing conditions is popular and mandates are not, but both are absolutely required for reform to work.
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Re: Line item voting
You don't know that. Nobody knows that. How about we try it and see what happens? That's the problem with leftisit socialists like yourself.. you think the dynamic in America is so rigid, so fragile, that unless its controled to the nth degree, all will fail.Lurker wrote:Repeating what I said here:
Line item voting would be a horrible idea, allowing Senators to vote yes on the easy and popular provisions while voting no on the unpopular ones. And just because something is unpopular or difficult doesn't mean it isn't necessary. For example, forcing insurance companies to take people with pre-existing conditions is popular and mandates are not, but both are absolutely required for reform to work.
Line item voting would prevent or reduce:
1. Pork
2. Special interest influence
And it would increase:
1. Leadership
2. Accountability
3. Transparency
4. Bi-partisanship.
But I do see your point, where would the leftisit agenda be without pork and special interests... and god forbid we inject leadership, accountability, tansparaency and bi-partisanship into the equation.
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
Embar
Alarius
Embar
Alarius
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Re: Line item voting
I didn't mention pork; that was Kulaf. I mentioned necessary but unpopular components of legislation. Why don't you research what an insurance death spiral is. Maybe then you'll understand why every country that has universal coverage, whether through single payer or through private insurance, has a mandate.
And the frothy "leftisit socialist" rhetoric is pretty amusing. Keep it up. You don't look at all unhinged!
And the frothy "leftisit socialist" rhetoric is pretty amusing. Keep it up. You don't look at all unhinged!
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Re: Line item voting
Define for me "necessary but unpopular", and please dont just link to other tired posts. And I'd ask you to consider that there may be a substantial amount of necessary AND popular objectives that can be achieved through line item voting, Care to debate that?Lurker wrote:I didn't mention pork; that was Kulaf. I mentioned necessary but unpopular components of legislation. Why don't you research what an insurance death spiral is. Maybe then you'll understand why every country that has universal coverage, whether through single payer or through private insurance, has a mandate.
And the frothy "leftisit socialist" rhetoric is pretty amusing. Keep it up. You don't look at all unhinged!
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
Embar
Alarius
Embar
Alarius
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Re: Line item voting
I already gave an example. And no, I don't want to "debate" with you. You've shown you aren't honest or interested in discussion, and playing whack-a-mole with a lie machine gets old after awhile. I like the over the top wingnut parody routine you have going though. Lets stick to that.
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Re: Line item voting
I'm gonna throw this out there:
Embar, I think you're wrong in calling it the "leftist agenda". I think what you really should be calling it is "progressive agenda".
Embar, I think you're wrong in calling it the "leftist agenda". I think what you really should be calling it is "progressive agenda".
Warlord Fallakin Kuvari - 85 Wood Elf Warrior, Brell Serilis forever.
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Grandmaster Nikallaf Kuvari - 70 Iksar Monk.
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Re: Line item voting
Mandates aren't unpopular - it depends largely on packaging. You mandate insurance by providing a default public option funded from taxation and then give tax rebates to people who go with private option.Lurker wrote:Line item voting would be a horrible idea, allowing Senators to vote yes on the easy and popular provisions while voting no on the unpopular ones. And just because something is unpopular or difficult doesn't mean it isn't necessary. For example, forcing insurance companies to take people with pre-existing conditions is popular and mandates are not, but both are absolutely required for reform to work.
Yes, you do need some degree of mandates to avoid adverse selection, but if you can't make it popular then you probably haven't hit on the right formula. Alternately you need to form some sort of bipartisan agreement to pass what needs to be passed before you run it up for a vote.
Ignoring Embar's barb at the end, I agree with his 6 points and I think it would be a good thing for the US on the whole.
Dd