2009年11月5日星期四

Obama to Visit Capitol to Rally Democrats on Health Care

President Barack Obama goes to Capitol Hill on Friday to urge Democrats to support legislation that would reform the U.S. health care system.Sale Inflatable to buy The House of Representatives will meet in a special Saturday session to consider the sweeping overhaul of health care, as Republicans intensified their criticism of the measure.
For the president and Democratic leaders, the objective is the 218 vote majority required in the 435 member House of Representatives to pass the health care bill.
Senate Democrats have not yet finalized a bill for consideration. Approval of a House measure would be a major step toward the president's goal of health care reform by the end of this year.
With Republicans having made their opposition clear, President Obama will be trying to solidify support across the political spectrum in his own party.
On Thursday, he made a point of citing the decision by two key organizations, the American Association of Retired Person's (AARP) and the American Medical Association, to support the legislation. "They are endorsing this bill because they know it will strengthen Medicare, not jeopardize it. They know it will protect the benefits our seniors receive, not cut them," he said.
Also on Thursday, Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters she is confident that Congress is on the brink of what she called a historic accomplishment, and repeated Democrat's pledge that the legislation would not add to the federal deficit.
"Accountability to our children that we will not add one dime to the deficit. The bill is paid for, and not only that, it reduces the deficit as we go forward, not add one dime to the deficit," he said.
At an outdoor rally, organized by a conservative organization Americans for Prosperity, a succession of speakers and Republican lawmakers assailed the legislation as a government takeover of health care and a threat to individual freedoms.
However, Pelosi and outdoor house inflatable other Democrats noted that the Republican's bill would provide health insurance to only 3 million people currently without it, while the Democrat's proposal aims to insure 36 million and eventually 96 percent of all Americans over time.
Both the House and Senate would have to approve separate bills and resolve remaining differences between them, before sending a final bill to the president for signature. And there are concerns that the Senate might not be able to act on legislation before the year ends.

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