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Obama projects $900 billion to fix health care

President backs ‘public option’ but only as limited part of larger plan

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Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP
Republicans wave copies of their health care bill in objection to President Barack Obama’s proposals Wednesday during a joint session of Congress. At one point, a Republican lawmaker shouted, ‘You lie!’ at Obama.
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Image: Barack Obama
  Obama: ‘Provide you with a choice’
Sept 9: President Barack Obama calls for action on health care reform. “Our collective failure to meet this challenge ... has led us to a breaking point,” he said. Watch the full video of Obama’s address.

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  GOP: Not the right plan
Sept. 9: In the official Republican response, Rep. Charles Boustany of Louisiana says more common-sense reform is necessary.

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  Obama heckled during health overhaul speech
Sept. 9: President Barack Obama offered several new details on his plans for health care reform but was verbally challenged by a congress member when he said his plan would not cover illegal immigrants. NBC’s Savannah Guthrie reports.

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  The Huffington Post’s Lawrence O’Donnell explains why GOP obstructionism is preventing President Barack Obama and Congressional Democrats from passing a health reform bill.

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By Alex Johnson
Reporter
msnbc.com
updated 11:04 p.m. ET Sept. 9, 2009

Declaring that he is determined to be the last president confronted with reshaping health care in America, President Barack Obama proposed a 10-year, $900 billion plan Wednesday night to overhaul a system that he said had left the country at “a breaking point.”

In a prime-time address to a joint session of Congress, Obama laid out the specifics of his proposal to change the way Americans’ medical care is paid for, responding to critics who have complained that he has not set forth precisely what he thinks the new program should be.

Obama outlined what he called the favored proposals of extremes on both sides of the health care debate: a single-payer system like Canada’s, in which the government provides coverage for everyone, and a dismantling of the employer-based system, leaving individuals to buy insurance on their own.

The president rejected both options, saying they would represent “a radical shift that would disrupt the health care most people currently have” — something that he said could not be allowed to happen. Instead, he charted a middle course on the most contentious issue of the entire debate — whether the government should directly pay for some Americans’ health insurance beyond the current Medicare and Medicaid programs.

While Obama strongly endorsed what has come to be known as the “public option,” he offered it as only a small component of a larger “insurance exchange” in which individual Americans and small businesses could pool their negotiating power to wrest better coverage and lower rates from private insurance companies.

“It would only be an option for those who don’t have insurance,” Obama said. “No one would be forced to choose it, and it would not impact those of you who already have insurance.”

And even then, he said that he would be open to alternatives as long as they accomplished the “ultimate goal” — ensuring coverage for uninsured Americans and promising “security and stability” for those who already have coverage.

That was not sufficient for Rep. Charles Boustany, R-La., who delivered the official Republican response.

“The president had a chance tonight to take government-run health care off the table. Unfortunately, he didn’t do it,” said Boustany, a cardiothoracic surgeon.

Obama: ‘Time for games has passed’
Obama’s address came against the background of harsh back and forth between proponents of competing health care proposals.

The president went out of his way to denounce the “scare tactics” of his opponents, which have included false claims that the government would convene panels to decide whether ill, elderly Americans should be forced to die.

In blunt language rarely heard from a president from the halls of Congress, Obama used words like “bogus,” “demagoguery” and “distortion.” He dismissed the death-panels claim as “a lie, plain and simple.”

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  Obama wields rhetoric for last health plan push
Sept. 9: Using the powerful venue of the U.S. Capitol to make a last push for his health care overhaul plan, President Barack Obama decided to hit back against detractors. NBC's David Gregory reports.

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And even as he declared that “the time for bickering is over” and that “the time for games has passed,” Obama took a strong swipe at his predecessor, President George W. Bush, in arguing that his proposal — whose price tag he himself put at $900 billion — would actually save money.

That bill would still be “less than we have spent on the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and less than the tax cuts for the wealthiest few Americans that Congress passed at the beginning of the previous administration,” he said.

Without naming Bush, Obama blamed his administration for bequeathing him “a trillion-dollar deficit when I walked in the door of the White House ... because too many initiatives over the last decade were not paid for — from the Iraq war to tax breaks for the wealthy.”

“I will not make that same mistake with health care,” he said.

  Obama’s health care plan

President Barack Obama’s health care proposal would:

• Allow Americans to keep their current coverage if they wish.

• Create an “insurance exchange” that would allow individuals and small businesses to bargain for insurance collectively.

• Bar insurance companies from denying coverage because of a pre-existing condition.

• Prohibit annual and lifetime caps on the coverage recipients can receive.

• Impose limits on out-of-pocket expenses.

• Require free coverage for routine checkups and preventive care.

Source: The White House

The remarks contributed to a palpable sense of tension in the room. When Obama promised that his plan would not cover illegal immigrants, Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C., shouted, “You lie!” — an outburst for which he quickly issued an apology.

“While I disagree with the president’s statement, my comments were inappropriate and regrettable,” Wilson said in a statement. “I extend sincere apologies to the president for this lack of civility.”

Wilson also called the White House and apologized to Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel after fellow Republicans criticized the episode.

“I think we ought to treat the president with respect,” said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. “Anything other than that is not appropriate.”

Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., likewise said Wilson’s eruption was “not the kind of thing that to me is appropriate in that kind of setting.”

“My sense was that most people there didn’t think it was a good idea that it occurred, and I happen to be one of those.”

Individuals would join for group rates
Obama took pains to spell out that he was rejecting “a government takeover of the entire health care system.” Instead, he laid out a proposal to create a “marketplace” where individual Americans and small businesses could shop among a variety of private plans.

The idea is to clump individual Americans not already covered by their employers into one big group with “greater leverage to bargain with the insurance companies.” The exchange would take effect within four years, he said, “which will give us time to do it right.”

The collective bargaining of group rates “is how large companies and government employees get affordable insurance,” he said. “It’s how everyone in this Congress gets affordable insurance. And it’s time to give every American the same opportunity that we’ve given ourselves.”

Video
  Axelrod on Obama’s speech
Sept. 9: Rachel Maddow is joined by Obama senior advisor David Axelrod following President Obama’s health care speech to the joint session of Congress.

The Rachel Maddow Show

While the insurance exchange is the centerpiece of Obama’s plan, the White House told Democrats that the details would also include at least some ideas from Republicans because “he believes reform should be bipartisan.” But it said Obama was firm that it was now or never.

“The Republicans will have to decide whether they are genuine in their wish to work in a bipartisan manner, or whether they will continue to vote against proposals they have said are key to reform,” the White House message said.

If they choose the latter, it said, opponents “will need to either propose their own plan or explain why they think it is best to do nothing.”

In an interview with Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski of MSNBC TV, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Wednesday that Obama still hoped Republicans would sign on to his efforts but that it might not be possible.

Referring to three Republican senators crucial to the debate, Gibbs said: “We’ve worked with Olympia Snowe, with Mike Enzi, with Chuck Grassley. What we’re trying to do is bring Republicans together. ... But some people don’t want to come together.”


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