If They Just Pass The Popular Bits

Benjamin Zycher, writing at NRO's health care blog, outlines what he sees as the next battle:

Dems will now turn to a limited version of health-care legislation designed and labeled as "insurance reform" — that is, sharp limitations on underwriting combined with guaranteed-issue and no-cancellation regulations. In other words, no denial of coverage based on medical condition.

This would yield a massive adverse-selection problem: No one would sign up for coverage until they developed expensive medical conditions. Even accident victims would be invited to sign up for "insurance" — shifting their known costs onto others — as they were wheeled into the emergency rooms. This, of course, would destroy the private-insurance sector, leaving only government to fill the void. Voila! Single-payer by stealth.

As he writes:

Public-opinion polls show overwhelming support for such regulations, and Republicans in Congress would be hard-pressed to oppose them.

In the end, they may realize just how sensible the current Senate bill is. There are some twists and turns in this yet to come.