In a sharp face-to-face confrontation, US President Barack Obama chastised Republican lawmakers on Friday for opposing him on taxes, health care and the economic stimulus, while they accused him in turn of brushing off their ideas and driving up the national debt.
Obama and Republican House members took turns questioning and sometimes lecturing each other for more than hour at a Republican gathering in Baltimore. The Republicans agreed to let TV cameras inside, resulting in an extended, point-by-point interchange almost unprecedented in US politics.
With voters angry about partisanship and legislative logjams, both sides were eager to demonstrate they were ready to cooperate, resulting in the Republican invitation and Obama’s acceptance. However, Friday’s exchange showed that Obama and the Republicans remain far apart on key issues, and neither side could resist the chance to challenge and even scold the other.
Obama said Republican lawmakers have attacked his health care overhaul so fiercely, “you’d think that this thing was some Bolshevik plot.”
His proposals are mainstream, widely supported ideas, he said, and they deserve some Republican votes in Congress.
But Tom Price pointedly asked Obama: “What should we tell our constituents who know that Republicans have offered positive solutions” for health care, “and yet continue to hear out of the administration that we’ve offered nothing?”
Obama disputed Price’s claim that a Republican plan would insure nearly all Americans without raising taxes.
“That’s just not true,” said Obama. He called such claims “boilerplate” meant to score political points.
Republican Conference Chairman Mike Pence defended Price on the health care proposals. He said a Republican agenda booklet given to Obama at the start of the session “is backed up by precisely the kind of detailed legislation that Speaker [Nancy] Pelosi and your administration have been busy ignoring for 12 months.”
Obama shot back that he had read the Republican proposals and that they promise solutions that can’t be realized.
In another exchange, Obama said some Republican lawmakers in the audience had attended ribbon-cutting ceremonies for projects in their districts funded by last year’s stimulus package that they voted against.
Pence said Obama was trying to defend “a so-called stimulus that was a piecemeal list of projects and boutique tax cuts.”
Obama replied, “When you say they were boutique tax cuts, Mike, 95 percent of working Americans got tax cuts.”
“This notion that this was a radical package is just not true,” he said.
Republicans are feeling energized after winning a Democratic Senate seat in Massachusetts, and Obama is trying to refocus his stalled agenda more on jobs than health care. With Obama at a podium facing a hotel conference room full of Republicans, both sides jumped to the debate.
“It was the kind of discussion that we frankly need to have more of,” said House Republican Whip Eric Cantor.
Some Republicans prefaced their questions with lengthy recitations of conservative talking points. The president sometimes listened impassively but sometimes broke in.
Obama launched into lectures of his own at times. He warned lawmakers from both parties against demonizing a political opponent, because voters might find it incomprehensible if the two sides ever agree on anything.
“We’ve got to be careful about what we say about each other sometimes, because it boxes us in in ways that makes it difficult for us to work together because our constituents start believing us,” Obama said. “So just a tone of civility instead of slash-and-burn would be helpful.”
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