Senate moderates are still working–and may be closing in on a deal.
Speaker John Boehner’s attempt to get a bill through his conference fell apart Tuesday night, but Sen. Susan Collins, a Republican from Maine, and other senators from both parties kept trying to hash out a deal.
On Wednesday’s Morning Joe, Collins characterized her plan as the “best hope” for a compromise.
“What the 14 of us have tried to do is offer an end to this impasse, to offer a path forward, where each side can point to provisions they like,” she said. “We’ve essentially reached an agreement.”
The Senate had spearheaded dealmaking late last week, coming to a tentative agreement on Monday night between Harry Reid and Mitch McConnell. But those talks stalled when Boehner tried to push forward with his own plan.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell himself suggested that the lines had reopened after the House bill fell apart on Tuesday evening. Asked whether he was going to meet with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, McConnell said: “I’m as near as the telephone.”









