I think you have it backwards...
No, I don't...
Sanders first announced his intent to introduce a single payer bill after Congress returned in September, back on August 15th:
Sanders plans to introduce single-payer bill in September
By Jessie Hellmann - 08/15/17 09:34 AM EDT
http://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/34 ... next-month
Then a couple of days prior, Sanders announce that he would be introducing the bill, (along with his left-wing Senator cosponsors) on Wed, Sept. 13th:
On Wednesday, Sanders will formally unveil the 2017 version of his “Medicare-for-all” legislation, shifting talk of single payer on Capitol Hill from an abstract conversation over whether the government should provide universal health coverage to a concrete discussion of a specific bill. With Republicans in control of Congress, single payer won’t pass, but supporters hope the legislation will increase public support, and political will, for an idea that has long been considered a long-shot liberal dream in the United States.
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/ar ... on/539676/
Then, also on the 13th, Graham introduced Graham-Cassidy, and he made
very clear in his press conference that he was exploiting the introduction of Sanders' proposal to provide the impetus to pass G-C:
“Behind me is the only thing between you and single-payer health care, a small band of brothers looking for a sister,” Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina told reporters as he, three other GOP senators, and one former senator unveiled a bill that would scrap Obamacare’s insurance mandates and convert the rest of the law into a block-grant program for the states.
Graham was referring to that other big health-care rollout occurring in the Capitol on Wednesday: Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders’s introduction of a “Medicare-for-all” bill that has picked up support from Democratic senators positioning themselves for possible presidential runs in 2020.
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/ar ... re/539721/
Now, both the Graham-Cassidy block grant plan and Sanders' "Medicare for All" proposal had been around for a while, (and both were introduced and voted down as substitute bill amendments during the Senate debate in late July) but in terms of this latest round of drama, the sequence of events makes the record clear...
Sanders was the first to announce that he was re-igniting the healthcare bill debate, and it was
his bill that provided the basis for relaunching the last ditch effort at "repeal and replace"...
As with any issue campaign, timing publicity to most effectively build momentum is critical
Yes, and by introducing this before October 1st, and providing the rationale for yet another serious "repeal and replace" effort, Bernie's timing sucked...
It now appears that this Last Chance Saloon effort is going to fail, but no thanks to Sanders or the rest of his hee haw gang...