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INSIDE WASHINGTON

Congressional Insiders Poll

Click here to see how prominent bloggers responded to these questions.

Q: How likely is Congress to enact comprehensive health care reform legislation this year?

Democrats (39 votes)

Very likely       62%
Somewhat likely   33%
Somewhat unlikely  5%
Very unlikely      0%

Very likely

"The clear consensus that the current system is broken is the driving force that assures some type of comprehensive reform will happen this year."

"Congress has accomplished everything the president set out to accomplish so far. Why wouldn't we want to reform health care?"

"It is the No. 1 domestic issue and Congress has no choice; 71 percent of the American people want a public option."

"This is a huge problem for businesses and families. The public overwhelmingly supports reform."

"Never underestimate Nancy Pelosi's capacity to move bills with big impacts through the House. The Senate may notice that two-thirds of the American public and the president want action."

"The health care bill better include a public option, or it will lose my vote."

"Everything I hear and see indicates that it will happen. Besides, other big items, like immigration reform, may not happen. Therefore, it is important to put a big score on the board."

"We have to. Now is the moment."

"So that no one goes bankrupt because they get sick? So people can be healthy? So that costs are low, choice is clear, and keeping your doctor is OK? Yes, we can."

Somewhat likely

"Even though the rhetoric from Republicans resembles the '90s, the political climate and the desire for change are much different."

Somewhat unlikely

"I am never an optimist for such large and complex matters."

"The only two things that are 'very likely' around here are 'High humidity is on the way' and 'The Texas judge is gonna get impeached.' "

Q: How likely is Congress to enact comprehensive health care reform legislation this year?

Republicans (38 votes)

Very likely         13%
Somewhat likely     39%
Somehwhat unlikely  39%
Very unlikely        8%

Very likely

"This is a must-win for Obama and congressional Democrats. If they fail, they lose their political legitimacy. Whatever it takes, they won't fail."

"Obama has invested too much of his own capital not to accomplish something of note."

"Some reform will get passed, but it will have to be much less aggressive than the current proposal (i.e., no massive tax increases) in order to get the necessary votes."

"Reconciliation [in the Senate] makes partisan 'reform' a sure bet."

"The closer we get to the election cycle, the less likely the administration will be able to justify the costs of massive and permanent expansions. They'll make it happen now."

Somewhat likely

"Somewhat likely. After the initial shock of the [Congressional Budget Office] score of over a trillion dollars wears off, they'll really start pushing in earnest."

"Unless Democrats continue to anesthetize K Street and the American people into rolling over for a government takeover of health care."

"It would be a Pyrrhic victory with results that will not meet the unreal promises."

"It may be less than what is on the table now."

"There is more consensus on this than cap-and-trade."

Somewhat unlikely

"They will call whatever they pass 'comprehensive reform,' but it will fall far short of what this administration set out to accomplish."

"If the Democrats give up on a 'public option,' then 'somewhat likely.' If they don't, it goes down to 'very unlikely.' We'll split the difference and say 'somewhat unlikely.' "

Very unlikely

"Between the price tag and a sagging economy, families outside the Beltway simply aren't ready for the government bureaucratic plan Democrats are wedded to."

"They will pass something called 'reform,' but it will not be very comprehensive."

Q: How likely is Congress to enact cap-and-trade legislation this year to curb global warming?

Democrats (39 votes)

Very likely       33 percent
Somewhat likely   54 percent
Somewhat unlikely  5 percent
Very unlikely      8 percent

Very likely

"It was touch-and-go there for a few weeks, but the fact that [Nancy] Pelosi and [Henry] Waxman are able to work out compromises with all parts of the Democratic Caucus is very encouraging. This is Pelosi's signature issue. And she's not going to let it go down without a fight."

"Pelosi helped those who disagreed to agree. The bill will pass the House. And the Senate may notice that the public and the president want this change."

"The Waxman-Markey bill will pass this week. And it will spark a clean-energy revolution that will put America in a position to lead the world in developing the new energy technologies that will power the world in the 21st century."

"The House will do it this week because the speaker won't let us go home until it's passed."

Somewhat likely

"It would be hard to vote against a sweeping climate-change measure that would cost the equivalent of a postage stamp a day."

"But real carbon curbs by Congress would include an increase in clean-energy standards to 30 percent by 2020, a restoration of authority to the EPA to regulate carbon emissions from power plants under the Clean Air Act, and a reduction in incentives to polluting industries."

"Getting both houses to agree is going to be very difficult. There is a big difference of opinion."

"On second thought, maybe I am too optimistic."

Q: How likely is Congress to enact cap-and-trade legislation this year to curb global warming?

Republicans (38 votes)

Very likely         5 percent
Somewhat likely    21 percent
Somewhat unlikely  45 percent
Very unlikely      29 percent

Very likely

"The House will have this passed by the weekend. The real test will be the Senate, but it's hard to imagine the Democrats letting this fall apart when they are so close."

Somewhat likely

"There are a lot of Democrats who know their states will be negatively impacted in a big way. And leadership needs to finesse those votes, mostly from the Midwest."

"All the focus on health care allowed the president and congressional Democrats to move an energy tax closer to the goal line. In the end, it probably gets stripped down to useless."

"It would be a Pyrrhic victory with results that will not meet the unreal promises."

Somewhat unlikely

"Adults in the Senate say 'no,' but not before vulnerable House Democrats cast a vote for their own retirement."

"Cost to consumers is a real problem."

"To curb global warming? Right. By less than a few hundredths of a degree Fahrenheit by 2050. Way to play into the propaganda."

"They should call it 'crap-and-fade.' "

Very unlikely

"Pelosi's religious fervor on the environment will force vulnerable Southern and Midwest Democrats to vote for a huge tax bill that the Senate won't move."

"Best they can hope for is [a renewable portfolio standard] to take to [international negotiations in] Copenhagen."

"Even the bill's supporters refuse to talk about climate change anymore. Now it's about green jobs and the economy. Maybe if we wait until next year it can be the Wall Street reform bill, too."

"Pelosi is leading her troops into the Valley of Death. They are fighting and dying for a bill the Senate will never pass."

National Journal Insiders

Democratic Congressional Insiders Sens. Sherrod Brown, Ben Cardin, Thomas Carper, Christopher Dodd, Edward Kennedy, Frank Lautenberg, Barbara Mikulski, Mark Pryor, Jon Tester; Reps. Jason Altmire, Robert Andrews, Michael Arcuri, Tammy Baldwin, Melissa Bean, Xavier Becerra, Howard Berman, Marion Berry, Rick Boucher, Lois Capps, Michael Capuano, Dennis Cardoza, Chris Carney, James Clyburn, Jim Cooper, Joseph Crowley, Elijah Cummings, Artur Davis, Diana DeGette, Rosa DeLauro, Eliot Engel, Anna Eshoo, Sam Farr, Chaka Fattah, Bob Filner, Phil Hare, Alcee Hastings, Rush Holt, Mike Honda, Steve Israel, Frank Kratovil, Jim Langevin, John Lewis, Zoe Lofgren, Nita Lowey, Carolyn Maloney, Ed Markey, Jim McDermott, Jim McGovern, Kendrick Meek, Jim Moran, David Price, Silvestre Reyes, Linda Sanchez, Jan Schakowsky, Mark Schauer, Jose Serrano, Adam Smith, John Spratt, Pete Stark, John Tanner, Ellen Tauscher, Bennie Thompson, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Henry Waxman, and Peter Welch.

GOP Congressional Insiders Sens. Lamar Alexander, Jim Bunning, John Cornyn, Jim DeMint, John Ensign, Lindsey Graham, Kay Bailey Hutchison, Johnny Isakson, Richard Lugar, Mel Martinez, Lisa Murkowski, Jeff Sessions, Olympia Snowe, John Thune, David Vitter; Reps. Michele Bachmann, Brian Bilbray, Marsha Blackburn, Roy Blunt, John Boehner, Charles Boustany, Kevin Brady, John Campbell, Eric Cantor, John Carter, Michael Castle, Tom Cole, Mike Conaway, David Dreier, Jeff Flake, Scott Garrett, Bob Goodlatte, Kay Granger, Doc Hastings, Pete Hoekstra, Bob Inglis, Darrell Issa, Peter King, Jack Kingston, Mark Kirk, John Kline, Christopher Lee, Dan Lungren, Kenny Marchant, Kevin McCarthy, Patrick McHenry, John Mica, Candice Miller, Sue Myrick, Devin Nunes, Mike Pence, Tom Price, Adam Putnam, Dave Reichert, Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Mike Rogers of Michigan, Peter Roskam, Paul Ryan, Pete Sessions, John Shadegg, Adrian Smith,

Mark Souder, Pat Tiberi, Fred Upton, and Joe Wilson.