Latest update: 27/02/2010 

- Barack Obama - healthcare reform - USA


Obama urges lawmakers to overcome stalemate on healthcare reform

Obama urges lawmakers to overcome stalemate on healthcare reform

President Barack Obama sought on Saturday to spark momentum for a final push to revive his stalled health care overhaul, insisting in his weekly radio address that Americans "cannot wait another generation for us to act."

By News Wires (text)
 

AFP- US President Barack Obama on Saturday called on Democrats and Republicans to overcome their differences on health care reform and act on his proposal without delay.
   
"It is time for us to come together," Obama said in his weekly radio address. "It is time for us to act. It is time for those of us in Washington to live up to our responsibilities to the American people and to future generations."
   
On Thursday, Obama held a high-stakes health care summit with top Republicans, but failed to break an impasse over his historic reform drive, prompting him to warn he would press on with or without Republican help.
   
Civility largely prevailed at the grueling day-long meeting, after Obama warned against "political theater", but there was no breakthrough on sharp ideological disputes threatening to suffocate his ambitious presidency.
   
Obama's plan to provide health insurance to millions of uninsured Americans stalled in Congress early this year, after Democrats lost a Senate seat to Republicans as a result of a special election in Massachusetts to replace the late senator Edward Kennedy.
   
The setback resulted to the loss by Democrats of a 60-vote filibuster-proof majority necessary these days to pass most legislation in the upper chamber.
   
All Senate Republicans have been steadfast in their opposition to the health reform plan.
   
Obama said in the address that at the summit, he had heard some Republican ideas that were "very worthy of consideration."
   
But he admitted that the two sides had disagreed over whether insurance companies should be held accountable for denying care or raising premiums, and over giving tax credits to small businesses and individuals.
   
"Some of these disagreements we may be able to resolve," argued the president. "Some we may not. And no final bill will include everything that everyone wants. That's what compromise is."
   
But he insisted Washington politicians could not lose this opportunity to move forward.  
   
"The tens of millions of men and women who cannot afford their health insurance cannot wait another generation for us to act," Obama said.
 

Comments (2)

Obama

He's going to be impeached for this, you know. Next year will be his last in office.

Obama is trying to justify

Obama is trying to justify the combination of government and business which creates high costs and makes it possible for insurance companies to deny their insured, the services they paid for. It is in the interests of insurance companies to deny services to those they already insure because the ensuing fuss enables government to gain the people's permission to subsidise the insurance companies, so that they will not deny services to the already insured. The healthcare industry has spent an unprecedented $400-million in a campaign to thwart the healthcare reforms. However, this is a trifling speculation of money on the part of the healthcare industry which has scented the blood in the water of the potential of 30-million to be compulsorily insured, it only taking $15 per head, one time, out of the annual subsidy which must be paid to insure those 30-million, and make a profit. The best and most honest reform, would be for Obama to get government entirely out of healthcare.

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