no they didn't.
Having a jersey on doesn't make you part of the team. Sharing the same values and being willing to work together does. Lieberman and the Blue Dogs were part of the other team. This is established and really a very silly tedious point to have to make.
how ridiculous are you willing to be? The Blue Dogs were as paid off by the health care industry as any Republican. There was no negotiating with them. They entertained but turned down every single effort in the public option direction because of this. They were the ones dictating that SPHC was off the table to even discuss. Of course actual Dems reached across the aisle trying to break the Republican block as they absolutely knew that some wearing their jersey were bought off... everyone knew this. Now you're trying in retrospect to pretend that all that matters is the jersey. Follow the money if you care to see who's on what team.
STOMP
Here's your better answer from me.
Republicans never enjoyed a 60 vote majority in the senate, yet were able to pass all sorts of things. Which is unfortunate, because they are supposed to be the party of smaller government and fiscal responsibility and didn't show it when they had both houses and the presidency. Like the Democrats, they are not a monolithic ideological group, but their leadership was able to get things done.
I have repeatedly posted my support for a government option, but the option I envisioned was NEVER considered. You talk about who's being paid off by the health care industry, and it sure looks like EVERYONE, since health care reform was all about forcing everyone to have health insurance provided by the industry. It was what Obama talked about from day 1, what democrats of every stripe talked about from day 1, and what the 60-40 procedural vote was in favor of.
What I envisioned was a VA style health care delivery system. The govt. builds hospitals, buys equipment, buys medicine, hires doctors, and treats people in its facilities for cost, basically. Slightly above cost so the few extra dollars per flu shot administered could be pooled to pay for the far more occasional heart or brain surgery. Not a dime to insurance companies, and not a single regulation of insurance companies required.
Nancy Pelosi did a great job as speaker in terms of keeping her membership in line. She counted her votes and knew which vulnerable members she could allow to vote the way the people wanted, to help save their jobs.
The whole mess was a debacle and ill timed and was made a priority when the economy was hurting and jobs and real estate (e.g. loss of wealth of main street) were far more urgent issues.
So I write that the whole thing is an issue of leadership and you disregard it as if it doesn't matter. It surely does. A guy you probably hate, W, was able to lead. He was able to convince his smaller government and fiscally responsible party to pass his agenda. HIS agenda. HIS SOCIAL agenda. Things like No Child Left Behind, a ginormous highway (infrastructure) bill, the biggest spending increase on Medicare (prescription drug program), etc. He and his people wrote legislation and submitted it to congress. He went on the road and rallied the people to pressure congress to vote for it. He knew how to wield the hammer and coerce congress to vote on things like war resolutions and reorganization of many departments into Homeland Security.
Clinton was just as good at leading, if not even better. When he had majorities in both houses, his presidency was in serious jeopardy. He tried to ram health care reform down everyone's throats and it cost him both houses. Then he wielded the hammer and got things done. Even balanced the budget.
What's Obama done? He's set the agenda - "I want health care reform." He never submitted an actual proposal, though. He went out on the road and told everyone what they wanted to hear, though not much of it resembled the final bill - that nobody read before voting on. The Bill didn't get written until the last minute, and wasn't properly vetted.
It's a sad thing that W managed things better than Obama has, but it's the sorry truth. Consider his leadership on stem cell research. I have NO problem with any form of stem cell research, myself, but I acknowledge there is a huge number of people who oppose it. What did W do? A compromise that nobody was happy with ultimately, but that appealed to both sides: use existing stem cell lines (can proceed and fund stem cell research), no new stem cell lines (raw meat for the religious conservatives).
Feel free to make the case that without 14 weeks of (yes it's true) filibuster proof senate, that Obama would have gotten his health care bill passed.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/28/us/politics/28obama.html?_r=1&hp
President on Sidelines in Critical Battle Over Debt Ceiling