US President Barack Obama on Sunday unveiled a dramatic gambit on his stalled health care plan to millions of Americans tuning in for the Super Bowl, summoning Republicans to a televised White House summit.
The Feb. 25 talks, announced by Obama in an interview with CBS, will mark the president’s most personal bid yet to salvage his health reform drive, as he fights to regain momentum after a rocky first year in power.
“After the recess, I want to come back and have a large meeting, Republicans and Democrats, to go through systematically all the best ideas that are out there and move it forward,” Obama said in the interview.
A White House official said that the meeting would be broadcast live, after Obama’s critics accused him of going back on a campaign promise to throw open health care negotiations to television cameras.
His attempt to cut health care costs, improve access to treatment and rein in abuses by insurance giants is on life support amid a shifting balance of political power ahead of congressional elections in November.
Failure to pass a bill would cast doubt on prospects for Obama’s already pared-down reform agenda, and inflict a damaging blow to his political authority.
His offer to include Republicans may signal however that any eventual compromise agreement would fall far short of the sweeping health reform law envisaged by many of his most fervent liberal supporters.
The president rolled out his new strategy in an interview on the pre-game show for the National Football League Super Bowl championship game — guaranteeing himself a captive audience watching on television.
Super Bowls garner television audiences in the tens of millions, and although Obama’s appearance came two hours before kick-off when audiences were yet to peak, it came as many viewers were tuning in.
On Saturday, Obama vowed he would overcome a “blizzard” of political opposition and salvage his health reform effort.
Republicans have accused Obama and congressional Democrats of using their majorities to shut them out of the health care reform effort.
John Boehner, the top Republican in the House of Representatives, welcomed the president’s announcement and laid out an initial bargaining position.
“Obviously, I am pleased that the White House seems interested in a real, bipartisan conversation on health care,” he said in a statement.
Boehner called on Obama to abandon his bid to pass comprehensive reforms of the US’ mostly private health care system, and to start a “step-by-step” process to lower health care costs and expand access to treatment.
Senate Democratic majority leader Harry Reid said that Democrats had tried to work with Republicans from day one on health care — implying that the opposition party had always intended to sabotage the effort.
“Senate Democrats will not relent on our commitment to protecting consumers from insurance company abuses, reducing health care costs ... and cutting the deficit,” Reid said.
House Democratic majority leader Steny Hoyer said he was ready to work with Republicans “who are sincere about providing constructive solutions to common challenges and willing to reach bipartisan compromise.”
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