Obama to House: Time to finish job on health care
By PHILIP ELLIOTT
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - In a private meeting on Capitol Hill and from
the presidential podium in the Rose Garden, President Barack Obama
on Saturday pressed for House passage of a health overhaul bill and
told lawmakers ``to rise to this moment'' and ``answer the call of
history.''
After the nearly hourlong session, Obama returned to his office
and made a public appeal to lawmakers' sense of history. Such
opportunities, the president said as the House worked toward a
final vote, ``come around maybe once in a generation.''
``Millions of Americans are watching right now,'' Obama said in
the Rose Garden.
``This is why they sent us here - to finally confront the
challenges that Washington had been putting off for decades, to
make their lives better, to leave this country stronger than we
found it,'' Obama said.
``This is their moment; this is our moment to live up to the
trust that the American people have placed in us, even when it's
hard - especially when it's hard. This is our moment to deliver,''
he said.
As Obama spoke, lawmakers at the other end of Pennsylvania
Avenue moved slowly toward a crucial vote on an overhaul of how
Americans receive health care coverage. The president described the
progress as moving the country ``closer than we've ever been to
passing health insurance reform for the American people.''
``Now's the time to finish the job,'' he said.
He said lawmakers must ``answer the call of history and vote
yes'' for the bill.
Earlier Saturday, Obama met with lawmakers and made his case
directly to them, deputy press secretary Bill Burton told
reporters. He said Obama again made the pitch that passing the
proposals would bring down the cost of health care for families,
small businesses and the government.
Obama opened his remarks to Democrats by speaking about this
week's shootings at Fort Hood, Texas, participants said. He told
lawmakers that the hardships members of the military make for the
country ``is what sacrifice really is,'' according to Rep. Robert
Andrews, D-N.J., as opposed to ``casting a vote that might lose an
election for you.''
``It put things in perspective in a very appropriate way,''
Andrews said.
Outside the meeting, protesters shouted at Obama's motorcade.
One man held a ``Don't Tread on Me'' flag while others shouted at
the entourage. Around the corner from Obama's entrance, protesters
screamed, ``Kill the bill,'' and ``Kill the Pelosi bill,'' a
reference to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
Obama told lawmakers - who spontaneously erupted in Obama
campaign chant ``fired up, ready to go'' at the end of the meeting
- he wants to sign a health overhaul bill by year's end.
Associated Press writers Erica Werner and Alan Fram contributed
to this report.
11/07/09 15:22
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