Premium
This is an archive article published on September 10, 2009

Obama pushes health overhaul

Barack Obama demanded that Congress end its bickering about a health care overhaul.

President Barack Obama demanded that Congress end its bickering about a health care overhaul,implored Republicans to bring him their good ideas but warned he would not “waste time” with those who put politics ahead of the needs of the American people.

In a sweeping defense of changing a system that he and others contend could bankrupt the world’s largest economy,the president told a nationally broadcast joint session of Congress Wednesday night that a nasty political summer was over and “now is the season for action.”

Obama was fighting not only for a signature domestic policy campaign promise but battling,too,to win back flagging public support for revamping a system that has left millions of Americans without health insurance,drives thousands into bankruptcy each day and consumes nearly 20 percent of the country’s economy.

Story continues below this ad

The United States is the only developed country without a universal program of health care coverage. As many as 50 million Americans lack insurance. While many Americans are dissatisfied with the health care system,attempts to change it are politically explosive.

On Thursday,Vice President Joe Biden said he expected a health care bill to be done by the Thanksgiving holiday in late November because Obama has “re-centered debate” and there’s bipartisan consensus for change despite the fight over a government-run option.

“I think the most important thing he did,he also debunked a lot of the myths out there,the idea of death panels,that we were going to insure undocumented aliens,” said Biden. He spoke on morning network news shows.

Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona,also interviewed Thursday morning,said he agreed that something needs to be done about health care. But he also said that if the administration wants to see legislation realized,it must reach out more aggressively to minority Republicans.

Story continues below this ad

“We need to do it,but it has to be bipartisan,” McCain said.

“We can’t lay another trillion dollars of debt on the next generation. … It’s generational theft.”

Through a summer of angry debate,Obama also witness a sharp decline in his once-soaring popularity.

The speech was a political tour de force. To the public,he offered assurances that his plan would provide more security and more health care choices,while offering coverage to people who cannot now afford it.

Story continues below this ad

To Republicans,he offered a hand to work together and pledged not to raise the government’s deficit. For Democrats,who want him to be more assertive,he lashed out at opponents,accusing them of employing scare tactics and lies to bring down the plan – and his presidency.

“I will not waste time with those who have made the calculation that it’s better politics to kill this plan than improve it,” he said.

Obama appealed to emotions,unveiling a letter from Edward Kennedy,the respected Democratic senator who died last month. In the letter,delivered posthumously,Kennedy expressed confidence that the overhaul would pass this year. Kennedy’s widow,Vicki,was in the chamber’s visitor’s gallery next to first lady Michelle Obama.

And Obama returned to the soaring political rhetoric that marked his presidential campaign.

Story continues below this ad

“We did not come to fear the future. We came here to shape it,” he told lawmakers.

It is unclear if Obama persuaded any Republicans. In keeping with tradition,most sat silently or offered polite applause during the speech.

But in an unusual outburst,one Republican congressman,Joe Wilson of South Carolina,shouted out “You lie” when the president said illegal immigrants would not benefit from his proposals. The president paused briefly and smiled,but from her seat in the visitor’s gallery,first lady Michelle Obama shook her head from side to side in disapproval of the interruption. Wilson later apologized for his “lack of civility.”

Health care has become the defining issue for Obama,just nine months after he took office amid enormous expectations at home and abroad. His success or failure may determine whether he has the political clout to press ahead on issues like climate change,arms control and the Afghanistan war. It is also likely to shape next year’s congressional elections.

Story continues below this ad

Obama’s plan would impose new regulations on insurers while requiring all Americans to get coverage. He says it would drive down prices,prevent insurers from dropping sick patients and ultimately strengthen the economy by curbing exorbitant health care costs.

He said the changes he wants would cost about $900 billion over a decade,”less than we have spent on the Iraq and Afghanistan wars,and less than the tax cuts for the wealthiest few Americans” passed during the Bush administration.

Republicans have overwhelmingly opposed the plan. They see it as a step toward a government takeover of health care and fear it will raise costs while driving down quality.

“Replacing your family’s current health care with government-run health care is not the answer,” Rep. Charles Boustany,a heart surgeon,said in the Republican response to the speech.

Story continues below this ad

If the summer belonged to opponents of his health care overhaul,Obama is hoping to lay claim to the rest of the year – and close it by getting a bill on his desk.

A CNN/Opinion Research Corp. snap poll of people interviewed before and after Wednesday night’s speech indicated that the president shifted public opinion in his favor. After the speech,

two-thirds said they supported Obama’s health care proposals,compared with 53 percent in a survey days before the president spoke.

That contrasted with an Associated Press-GfK poll released hours before the speech that showed many Americans had become disillusioned with Obama’s handling of health care. It found that disapproval of Obama’s handling of health care has jumped to 52 percent,from 43 percent in July.

Story continues below this ad

Robert Blendon,a public opinion expert at the Harvard School of Public Health,said that before Obama’s speech,the debate over health care had looked like a tennis match.

“He’s taken control of this issue for now,and into the future it looks like there’s a plan,and he’s leading it,” Blendon said.

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement