A bill that would have created the nation's only government-funded universal healthcare system died in the California Assembly on Monday as Democrats could not gather enough support to bring it for a vote ahead of a legislative deadline.
The bill had to pass by midnight on Monday to have a chance at becoming law this year. Democrats needed 41 votes for that to happen, a threshold that did not seem impossible given that they control 56 of the 80 seats in the state Assembly and universal healthcare has long been a priority for the party.
But intense lobbying from business groups put pressure on more moderate Democrats, who face tough reelection campaigns this year in newly-redrawn districts. Plus, Democrats were missing four lawmakers from their caucus — including three of their more liberal members — who had resigned recently to take other jobs.
"Especially with four democratic vacancies in the Assembly, the votes were not there today, but we will not give up," Assemblymember Ash Kalra, a Democrat from San Jose and the bill's author, said in a news release.
Kalra's decision not to bring the bill up for a vote incensed his allies in the California Nurses Association, who have been pushing for this bill for years — including campaigning heavily for Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom's 2018 election. While Kalra had authored the bill and gotten it out of two legislative committees to reach the Assembly floor, the Nurses Association said in a statement they were "outraged that Kalra chose to just give up on patients across the state."
Progressives have dreamed about a universal healthcare system in the U.S. for decades. Healthcare is so expensive, they say, in part because the nation's healthcare system is paid for by multiple parties, including patients, insurance companies, employers and the government. Instead, they say the U.S. healthcare system should have a single payer — the government — that would keep prices under control and make healthcare available to all.