Monday, March 8, 2010

Glenside pa

Glenside pa
Glenside pa : WashingtonPresident Obama is in a life or death on the way health care reform.
Go to the next paragraph
In a campaign-style speech at a university in Glenside, Pennsylvania, Monday, the President urged wavering Democratic lawmakers to enact reform and rejected arguments that the timing is wrong, given the weak economy.
“If not now, when? If not us, who?” Mr. Obama said, describing the current situation “unsustainable” for the nation. “Think about it: We’ve been talking about health care for nearly a century. I’m reading the biography of Teddy Roosevelt now. He was talking about it, Teddy Roosevelt.”
Obama acknowledged the political heavy lifting involved – to try to get to pass a bill that the majority of Americans do not like or even necessarily understand. But, he said he would seek to pass the reform, regardless of political consequences.
“I do not know how that goes to health care will play politically, but I know that this is the right thing to do,” the president said in his speech at the University of Arcadia, which is in the Philadelphia area.
Opponents of reform is also the withdrawal of heavy artillery. The conservative group called the American Future Fund launched a television advertising campaign in the areas of 18 of the Democrats in the House of Representatives, reportedly at a cost of $ 900,000. All the 18 members who voted for reform last November and 11 represent districts won by the presidential Republican candidate John McCain in 2008. As in the November midterm elections approaching, and those are among the Democrats most at risk.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her deputies faced a formidable challenge: to get their troops to vote for the Senate version of the bill, building on the promise, which will be determined to make the legislation more palatable. The version that passed the Senate last December, before the Democrats lost 60 pirate anti-vote majority, and contains elements of the party now rejects, such as the so-called “Cornhusker bribe” for the State of Nebraska.
Senate version also contains language on abortion that some Democrats in the House of Representatives is not acceptable – the language that can kill a full agreement. On Sunday, remained Bart Stupak (d) of Michigan, opponent of abortion rights, and the focus of concern for the Democratic leadership. Mr. Stupak voted for the House version of the legislation after it is believed to include a provision that would ensure that any federal funding of abortions in the reform. He says: if it is not satisfied with the final plan, he could take more than a dozen Democrats with him in voting “no.” Supporters of abortion rights say that the language Stupak will institute the toughest abortion restrictions currently in place.
On Sunday, said Rep. Chris Van Hollen (d) of the state of Maryland, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said Democrats were still aiming to solve this problem.
“We’re going to continue to work with Bart Stupak and those members who have this is the source of major concern,” Representative Van Hollen said network (CNN.
After Obama’s speech Monday, the leaders of the Republican Party on fire. House Minority Leader John Boehner (R) of Ohio and called the President in the playing field “to oil a snake, light on reality.”
Republicans have long called for Obama to start a new reform. The President repeatedly shown that this will not happen.
But Republicans are not the issue. It’s in the Congress of Democrats he needs to bring on board the plane, through a parliamentary maneuver known as “reconciliation.”

No comments:

Post a Comment