With a showdown set for Sunday on the House floor, Democratic leaders still did not command the 216 votes they needed, so every undecided lawmaker was the focus of personal attention from the leader of the House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and the White House, and every ”no”-to-``yes” conversion was trumpeted by party leaders.
Obama, who delayed a trip to Indonesia and Australia to help ensure passage of the legislation, spoke to an enthusiastic crowd at a suburban university, lobbing attacks at the insurance industry with his coat jacket off and sleeves rolled up. “The only question left is this: Are we going to let the special interests win once again, or are we going to make this vote a victory for the American people?” he said.
Obama described the stakes in stark terms, using words uttered so rarely out of the White House that they seem all but banned: “If this vote fails.” What then? The insurance industry will continue to run amok,” the president said, pointing to rising rates, denials of coverage and limits on care. Meanwhile in Congress, the vote-counting spotlight swung to Rep. John Boccieri, a Democrat, who announced that he would support the bill despite voting against an earlier version. “I’m not worried about the election,” he said. ”I’m worried about doing what’s right.”
Boccieri became the fourth House Democrat to switch from ”no” to “yes.” Shortly after he announced his decision, Pelosi predicted: “When we bring the bill to the floor, we will have a significant victory for the American people.” The conversation was all about how Democrats would vote since Republicans have formed a virtually impenetrable phalanx of opposition for the past several months. Both liberal and conservative Democrats are not happy with some provisions in the legislation. The momentum was not all in the right direction for Democratic leaders. Some rank-and-file Democrats who backed an earlier version of health care legislation when it passed the House in November showed signs of defecting. Weaker restrictions on federal funding of abortion was a concern, but not the only one.
Rep. Stephen Lynch, a Democrat and former labor union activist, said even a one-on-one meeting with Obama on Thursday had not convinced him that the legislation did enough to reform the health system and rein in insurers and drug companies.
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