President Barack Obama, flanked by health care
professionals Barbara Crane, left, and Stephen Hanson,
speaks about health care reform. (AP Photo/Charles
Dharapak)
President Barack Obama urged Congress today to vote
"up or down" on sweeping health care legislation in the next
few weeks, endorsing a plan that denies Senate Republicans the
right to kill the bill by stalling with a filibuster.
"I don't see how another year of negotiations would help.
Moreover, the insurance companies aren't starting over,"
Obama said, rejecting Republican calls to begin anew on an
effort to remake the health care system.
The president made his appeal as Democratic leaders in
Congress surveyed their rank and file for the votes needed to
pass legislation by majority vote - invoking rules that deny
Senate Republicans the right to block it through endless
stalling debate. Obama specifically endorsed that approach.
The outcome will affect nearly every American, either making
major changes in the ways they receive and pay for health
care or leaving current systems in place. There is still no
certainty about the final result in Congress - or even that
Democrats will agree to the series of changes that Obama said
he was including as Republican contributions.
GOP leaders were unmoved.
The Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky,
said a decision by Democrats to invoke rules that bar
filibusters would be "met with outrage" by the public, and he
said Obama was pushing a sweeping bill that voters don't
want.
"They've had enough of this yearlong effort to get a win for
the Democratic Party at any price to the American people,"
McConnell said on the Senate floor.
At its core, Obama's proposal would extend health care to
tens of millions of uninsured Americans while cracking down
on insurance company practices such as denying coverage on
the basis of a pre-existing medical condition.
With his remarks, delivered at the White House, Obama took
the lead in a bid by congressional Democrats to mount a
party-line rescue mission for the health care legislation
that appeared on the cusp of passage late last year, only to
be derailed when Republicans won a Massachusetts Senate seat
that gave them the ability to block it.
Obama's remarks were replete with criticism of the insurance
industry as well as dismissive asides about GOP critics.
Insurers are "continuing to raise premiums and deny coverage.
For us to start over now could simply lead to delay that
could last for another decade or more," he said.
As for calls for additional debate, he said that in the year
since he inaugurated his campaign for health care changes,
"every idea has been put on the table. Every argument has
been made."
"Everything there is to say about health care has been said,
and just about everyone has said it," Obama said as murmurs
of laughter swept through his receptive audience of invited
guests in the White House East Room.
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