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It's darn near unanimous:

Not voting on Healthy Utah is secret government in action — Salt Lake Tribune Editorial

"Two words describe House Speaker Greg Hughes' refusal to send Healthy Utah to the House floor:

"Secret government.

"Hughes maintains there is not sufficient support to debate and vote on arguably the most significant legislation this session. How does he know that? From conversations and closed-door caucuses of the 84 percent of House members who are Republicans, he says. He also says those closed caucuses didn't even include a vote. It was apparently so obvious that it's better to not waste time on it.

"This is a caucus with 63 people in it, and he made that call without even a show of hands? Did he do it by watching people either nod or shake their heads while others spoke? No. Like any good legislative leader, he has a list of votes, and he's OK with keeping that list secret to give political cover to his colleagues. ..."

— Healthy Utah — governor's plan deserves debate and a vote — Deseret News Editorial

"The decision by the Utah House leadership to keep the initiative known as Healthy Utah from being heard by Utah's representatives betrays the interests of Utah's most vulnerable citizens and mocks the basic respect and comity owed in our legislative process. ..."

Healthy Utah bill should be heard — Ogden Standard-Examiner Editorial

"What a bunch of cowards.

"We believe a decision by the Republican-dominated House not to consider Gov. Gary Herbert's plan for expanding Medicaid is to protect members from having to publicly vote on the matter and hear public testimony showing overwhelming support for the measure. ..."

House must allow debate on health care — Provo Daily Herald Editorial

"Republican House Speaker Greg Hughes is dead wrong to not allow debate on the Healthy Utah or expanded Medicaid during this legislative session.

"Hughes' reasoning? He says there is no support for either plan.

"Wait, what?

"Isn't this the same issue that state senators overwhelmingly supported on Wednesday? ..."

"Renowned 20th-century theologian and philosopher Thomas Merton wrote a passage in one of his 70-plus books that seems relevant to what is happening in the Utah Legislature:

" 'It is easy enough to tell the poor to accept their poverty as God's will when you yourself have warm clothes and plenty of food and medical care and a roof over your head and no worry about the rent. But if you want them to believe you — try to share some of their poverty and see if you can accept it as God's will yourself.' ... "

" ... Scott Hayashi, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Utah, said he'd like to have a conversation with House Speaker Greg Hughes, R-Draper, about the thousands of Utahns who could die without access to health care.

"Earlier this week, Hughes declared that an alternative proposal to expand Medicaid coverage for the poor, known as Healthy Utah, was dead on arrival in the House after winning Senate approval.

" ... 'I believe in resurrection, I don't know about you,' Hayashi said. 'If God can raise Jesus from the dead, I think good people of God can raise Healthy Utah from the dead as well.' ..."

Healthy Utah's costs are small compared to enormous benefits — Sven E. Wilson | For The Salt Lake Tribune

Healthy Utah would help working parents — Lincoln Nehring, Voices for Utah Children | For The Salt Lake Tribune

Healthy Utah is what Utahns want, need and deserve — Mark Miller, chairman of University of Utah Hospitals and Clinics Board of Trustees | For The Salt Lake Tribune

Well, like I said. Darn near unanimous:

Healthy Utah is still Obamacare and should be rejected — Derek Monson, The Sutherland Institute | For The Salt Lake Tribune