Wednesday, March 03, 2010

Obamacare 2.139


Time to act on health care, Obama declares

Mar 3 02:59 PM US/Eastern
By ALAN FRAM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Barack Obama urged Congress Wednesday 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

GOP leaders were unmoved, despite Obama's declaration that he had incorporated a few of their proposals into his revised legislation.

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.

There is still no certainty about the outcome—or even that Democrats will agree to the series of changes that Obama said represented Republican contributions.[More]


It's the totalitarian way. Al Gore said the same thing about "global warming" when he unilaterally declared that "the debate is over." Obama has declared that everything that needs to be said about health care reform has been said and that he will be the final arbitrer. The man's arrogance has no limits.

Obama's challenge continues to be his own corrupt party's inability to coalesce around a single bill. December elections are weighing heavier on Democrats' minds than Obama's legacy.

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