Obama Presses Senate to Act Quickly on Its Health Bill

By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
Published: November 8, 2009, New York Times

WASHINGTON — The White House, growing concerned that the Congressional timetable for passing a health care overhaul could slip into next year, is stepping up pressure on the Senate for quick action, with President Obama appearing Sunday in the Rose Garden to call on senators to gtake up the baton and bring this effort to the finish line.h

Mr. Obamafs remarks came just 14 hours after the House narrowly approved a landmark plan that would cost $1.1 trillion over 10 years and extend insurance coverage to 36 million uninsured Americans; the president called it ga courageous vote.h But the votes had barely been counted when the White House began turning its attention to an even bigger hurdle: getting legislation passed in the Senate.

In the Senate, where proposals differ substantially from the House-passed measure on issues like a government-run plan and how to pay for coverage, the bill is stalled while budget analysts assess its overall costs. The slim margin in the House — the bill passed with just two votes to spare, and 39 Democrats opposed it — suggests even greater challenges in the Senate, where the majority leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, is struggling to hold on to all 58 Democrats and two independents in his caucus.

Mr. Obama has staked his domestic agenda on passing comprehensive health legislation, a goal that has eluded presidents for decades. While Democrats were forced to make major concessions on insurance coverage for abortions to win House passage of the bill, they were nonetheless ebullient on Sunday, with many saying the vote gave them momentum to push the bill forward.

gFor years wefve been told that this couldnft be done,h Mr. Obama said in the Rose Garden. Of the American people, he said, gMoments like this are why they sent us here.h

But for all the exultation, there was a sense inside the White House and on Capitol Hill that the hardest work is yet to come. The House debate highlighted the pressures that will come to bear on senators as they weigh contentious issues like federal financing for abortion, coverage for illegal immigrants and the gpublic option,h a government-backed insurance plan to compete with the private sector.

In the Senate, Mr. Reid has merged two bills into one. The fine print is not public, but the broad outlines are known. Unlike the House bill, which pays to extend coverage by taxing individuals who earn more than $500,000 a year and couples who earn more than $1 million, the Senate bill imposes a 40 percent excise tax on so-called Cadillac plans that cost more than $8,000 a year for an individual or $21,000 for a family.

And unlike the House bill, which includes a national public plan, the Senate measure would allow states to opt out. But even that is too much government involvement for moderates like Senator Joseph I. Lieberman of Connecticut, a Democrat-turned-independent, who pledged Sunday to wage a filibuster to block any plan with a public option in it.

gIf the public option plan is in there,h Mr. Lieberman said on gFox News Sunday,h gas a matter of conscience, I will not allow this bill to come to a final vote.h

Apart from substantive hurdles, the Senate bill faces procedural ones; Mr. Reid cannot bring it to the floor for debate until he gets an analysis, or gscore,h from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, expected later this week. The delay could push Senate consideration of the bill until after Thanksgiving, which could in turn make it very difficult for Congress to meet Mr. Obamafs goal of signing a health bill into law by the end of this year.

The timing is crucial. Administration officials say Mr. Obama wants to wrap up work on health care so that he can turn his attention to other legislative priorities, including passing an energy bill and revamping financial regulations. But White House officials also know that the closer the final vote comes to the November 2010 midterm Congressional elections, the more difficult it will be to pass legislation.

Sending members of Congress home over an extended Christmas break without a health care bill in hand could prove disastrous politically. Democrats remember well the setbacks they suffered over the August recess when the Senate Finance Committee failed to meet Mr. Obamafs deadline for finishing its measure, and lawmakers were pummeled in town-hall-style meetings around the country.

gThe holiday break is viewed the same way as the August break,h said one Democrat close to the White House, speaking anonymously to discuss strategy. gWe donft want a repeat. We could probably survive it, but why take the chance?h

The White House began prodding Mr. Reid to move quickly even before Saturdayfs House vote. In a private meeting with Mr. Obama this year, Mr. Reid pledged to work to finish the measure by the end of December. But last Tuesday, Mr. Reid said the Senate was gnot going to be bound by any timelines.h

On Wednesday, Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of staff, visited Mr. Reid. The two met on Capitol Hill to gcontinue the discussion on ways to get a bill done by the end of the year,h said Mr. Reidfs press secretary, Jim Manley, adding that Mr. Reid intends to bring the bill to the floor gas quickly as possible.h

In case the leader did not get the message, Mr. Obama reinforced it Saturday night. In a statement after the House vote, he said he looked forward to signing comprehensive health legislation gby the end of the year.h

A big question is whether Mr. Reid has the 60 votes that will almost certainly be necessary to permit debate to begin. Mr. Manley said Democrats hoped gthe momentum from the House bill will make everyone realize that the Senate should at least have a chance to begin debate.h Still, he conceded that there was gno glide pathh toward getting the Senate to actually pass the measure.

As the Senate vote draws closer, the fight on the airwaves, where groups for and against the health bill are already spending millions of dollars on advertising, will only intensify. Republicans are also intensifying their opposition as they try to cast Democrats as tax-and-spend liberals, a theme echoed Sunday by Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader.

gSoon, Senate Democrats will propose their own version,h Mr. McConnell said in a statement. gWe donft know how big it will be or how expensive, but we do know with certainty that it will mean higher premiums, higher taxes and massive cuts to Medicare to create even more government programs. Thatfs not reform.h

Representative Pete Sessions of Texas, the chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, issued a fund-raising appeal within hours of the vote. In an e-mail message to supporters, he said of Democrats, gTheir unprecedented power grab will further bankrupt America while destroying the finest medical system in the world.h

But Representative Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, the chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, had his own fund-raising appeal, an e-mail message sent to supporters shortly after midnight Sunday that said gthank you for helping to make this historic day.h Below the text was a bold blue icon, a link to the committeefs fund-raising site, that proclaimed in block letters, gContribute Now.h

Carl Hulse contributed reporting.

A version of this article appeared in print on November 9, 2009, on page A1 of the New York edition.