 Obama Reaches Out to Republicans on Health Care, but Bipartisan Bill Looking  Unlikely
Obama Reaches Out to Republicans on Health Care, but Bipartisan Bill Looking  UnlikelyPresident Obama and some Democratic congressional leaders had pledged to  involve Republicans in health care reform negotiations, but it is looking  increasingly likely that bipartisanship will be among the casualties of the rush  to approve a bill.
Obama told Congress on Friday not to "lose heart" in moving quickly to hammer  out legislation that would check rising health care costs and cover millions of  uninsured Americans without adding to the federal deficit.
But Republican proposals have gone nowhere in Congress, and the GOP isn't  signing on to the Democrats' proposals -- and that didn't stop Obama from  heralding "unprecedented progress." 
Three of the five congressional committees working on health care legislation  passed their versions of the Democratic plan this week without winning over a  single Republican vote. The House Energy and Commerce Committee and the Senate  Finance Committee are still discussing the proposals.
Democrats facing tough re-election bids or representing conservative  districts are demanding additional measures to hold down costs. They have been  unnerved by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office declaring that the  legislation taking shape so far would not prevent federal spending on health  care from rising.
Republicans have seized on those remarks as ammunition.
"When are Democrats going to admit that their claims about their  government-run plan are pure fiction? Repeating the same disproven myths over  and over again will not make them true," said Michael Steel, spokesman for House  Minority Leader John Boehner of Ohio.
"Instead, Democrats should scrap their costly, job-destroying proposal and  work with Republicans on a real plan to give Americans better access to  affordable health care."
Yet Obama is soldiering on in his quest to get members of both political  parties on board with his top domestic priority.
So far, he has summoned Republicans and Democrats to the White House. He has  used public forums to make a direct pitch to the people. He has turned to his  political operation to air campaign-like TV ads.
But it will take a lot to convince Republicans, nearly united in opposing the  Democrats' plan.
"It would empower Washington -- not doctors and patients -- to make health  care decisions and would impose a new tax on working families during a  recession," Arizona Sen. Jon Kyl said in the GOP's weekly address. "They propose  to pay for this new Washington-run health care system by dramatically raising  taxes on small business owners."
Kyl, the Senate's No. 2 Republican, said his party's proposed alternatives  should be considered.
"These changes do not require government takeover of the health care system,  or massive new spending, job-killing taxes or rationing of care," he said,  seeking to string together the biggest fears of Obama's plan to challenge the  popular president.
Obama rejected such criticism out of hand in his weekly Internet and radio  address.
"Now, we know there are those who will oppose reform no matter what," Obama  said. "We know the same special interests and their agents in Congress will make  the same old arguments and use the same scare tactics that have stopped reform  before because they profit from this relentless escalation in health care  costs."
Obama must choose at some point whether to make concessions that could  attract a few Senate Republican votes -- and anger liberal supporters. The  alternative is a bare-knuckled parliamentary tactic that would inflame partisan  tensions and probably kill some of the items he wants in the legislation.
On Wednesday he invited four Republican senators to the White House to  discuss health care. Three -- Sens. Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, Bob Corker of  Tennessee and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska -- are seen by colleagues as highly  unlikely to vote for an Obama-backed plan.
The fourth, Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, is a moderate Republican viewed as a  possible supporter, even though she has demanded changes in the  Democratic-drafted bills.
Even those who accepted White House invitations said it's hard to imagine  that Obama thinks such chats with conservatives will win him any votes.
"I think he's just trying to get a sense as to what the prognosis might be in  the Senate," Murkowski said in an interview.
As for Obama's push to get the House and Senate to pass separate bills by  August, she said, "I just don't see how it comes together."
Murkowski said the White House is sending a "mixed message" by coupling its  Republican outreach with thinly veiled threats to use strong-arm tactics to ram  home a health care bill if Republicans insist on too many changes.
Obama adviser David Axelrod is walking that line.
"We want to work with everyone who will work with us, and we want to do it in  the spirit of bipartisanship," he said in an interview Thursday. But, he added,  "We can't defer reform and we want to move forward. Those who don't, they need  to address those Americans struggling with higher premiums and losing their  insurance."
Senate Democrats could resort to a parliamentary procedure, known as  "reconciliation," that essentially would bar Republicans from using stalling  tactics to block a health care bill. But Senate rules would allow opponents to  knock some nonbudgetary items from the bill. Those might include the "public  option" for insurance, which is dear to many liberals.
"It's obviously better to have it bipartisan," said John Podesta, who headed  Obama's transition team and advises on health care. "But there is a considerable  amount that could be done, and will be done, with reconciliation" if Republicans  don't come on board, he said.
 
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