Obama eyes Dems-only endgame at summit
President Barack Obama closed Wednesday’s healthcare summit by stating his willingness to use controversial rules to pass
healthcare with a simple majority vote.
Obama insisted at the highly-anticipated healthcare summit aimed at bringing the parties together that
he hoped to win Republican support. But in the end, he made it clear that he intends to
move forward with or without the GOP.
{mosads}“We cannot have another yearlong debate about this,” Obama
said. “When it comes to the most contentious issue, I’m not sure we can bridge
the gap.”
Obama put Republicans on notice that he is not willing to
start over again, as they demanded, on a healthcare reform debate that
dominated much of the last year.
He added that he is open to waiting only a few weeks for the
GOP to change its political tack and support healthcare reform.
“I think the concern that a lot of the colleagues in the
House and the Senate on the Democratic side have is that after a year and a
half of dealing with this issue, they suspect that starting over means not
doing much,” Obama said at the close of a day-long bipartisan healthcare reform
summit he hosted at Blair House.
“Politically speaking, there may not be any reasons for
Republicans wanting to do anything.”
Not surprisingly, Republicans evinced little interest in moving in Obama’s direction. “What we think they ought to do is start over and go step by step and target possible areas of agreement talked about in the meeting today,” said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).
The GOP cited polls showing public
opinion is against the Democratic bills, and repeatedly asked Obama to disavow
use of budget reconciliation rules to move a final bill through the Senate with
a simple majority vote.
The rules have been used in the past, including by a
Republican Congress to approve tax cuts favored by President George W. Bush.
But Republicans insist they should not be used for healthcare reform given the
size and importance of the legislation.
In the end, Obama maintained, he and Democrats would act and
leave it to voters to decide whether they had acted wisely. “That’s what
elections are for,” he said.
He also argued that the public cares more about what
Congress does than how it does it.
“I think the American people aren’t always all that
interested in procedures inside the Senate,” Obama said. “I do think that they
want a vote on how we’re going to move this vote. And I think most Americans
think a majority vote makes sense.”
At the same time, Obama attempted to distance himself from
the inner workings of Congress, saying that it was up to House and Senate
leaders from both parties to decide their next steps.
Congressional Democratic leaders declared afterward they
were ready to go. “The fact is that we’re going to move forward,” said House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.)
“Time is of the essence. The American people waited five
decades for this, and we are going to do this,” said Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid (D-Nev.).
Little new ground was covered throughout the more than
seven-hour summit, which stretched an hour past its scheduled end.
Republicans and Democrats alike stuck to well-worn talking
points as the day wore on.
The GOP continued to assail Obama’s proposal for its cost
and size, repeatedly asking the president to “scrap the bill” and
start over.
That strategy was clearly a non-starter with Obama and his
Democratic allies, as they also rejected pleas from Republicans to promise to
abandon efforts to pass the bill through reconciliation.
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who was reminded earlier in the
day by the president that the election between them was over, warned Obama that
bypassing the filibuster rules could “cause great harm” to both the
Senate as the institution and the country as a whole.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) also decried
the tactic, pointing to polling that indicates Americans are overwhelming
opposed to reconciliation.
Democrats were largely successful in keeping the discussion
on process to a minimum, even as Republicans repeatedly brought it up.
As the discussion ended, the president thanked the participants
for their “civil tone.” The back-and-forth was marred by few interruptions and
virtually no partisan fireworks.
Neither side appeared willing to give, but many Democrats
offered that the two parties are not far away from reaching an agreement.
Republicans indicated that their skepticism about the summit had been justified. “I just don’t think the president was listening even though he invited us to listen to our ideas,” said Senate Minority Whip Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.).
Michael O’Brien and Jordan Fabian contributed to this article
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