Obama urges GOP to work with Dems
By ConnPolitics.tv Editor on Jan 29, 2010 | In News, Republican Party, President Barack Obama | 16 feedbacks »
By STEPHEN OHLEMACHER and CHARLES BABINGTON
Associated Press Writers
BALTIMORE (AP) – In a remarkably frank encounter, President Barack Obama chastised Republican lawmakers on Friday for opposing him on taxes, health care and economic stimulus, while they accused him of ignoring their ideas and driving up the national debt.
The president and GOP House members took turns questioning and sometimes lecturing each other face to face for more than hour at the Republican gathering.
Obama warned that their sharp criticisms of him over the past year make it almost politically impossible for them to agree with him even if an accord would help the American people. They said he was misleading the American people in saying they had offered no serious alternatives to his proposals.
While both parties were conciliatory at times, the televised exchange featured pointed complaints and accusations that went well beyond the terse sound bites that dominate much of the nation’s political debate.
Obama said Republican lawmakers have attacked his health care overhaul so fiercely, “you’d think that this thing was some Bolshevik plot.” The plan’s components are mainstream, common-sense items, he said, and deserving of some bipartisan support.
“I am not an ideologue,” the president said.
The Republicans sat attentively throughout Obama’s speech and the discussion. There was some grumbling when he remarked – after being pressed about closed-door health care negotiations – that most of the legislation was developed in congressional committees in front of television cameras.
“That was a messy process,” he acknowledged.
Several Republicans challenged Obama with lengthy complaints and sharp questions.
“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?” asked Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga.
Obama showed little sympathy, disputing Price’s claim that a Republican plan would cover nearly all Americans without raising taxes.
“That’s just not true,” said Obama. He called such claims “boilerplate” meant to score political points.
Obama said a GOP-driven “politics of no” was blocking action on bills that could help Americans obtain jobs and health care.
In another barbed exchange, he said some in the audience have attended ribbon-cutting ceremonies for projects in their districts funded by the 2009 stimulus package they voted against. Obama also questioned why Republicans have overwhelmingly opposed his tax-cut policies, which he said have benefited 95 percent of American families.
“This notion that this was a radical package is just not true,” Obama said.
GOP lawmakers pressed him to pledge to support a presidential line-item veto for spending bills and to endorse across-the-board tax cuts. Obama said he was ready to talk about the budget proposal but demurred on the idea of cutting everyone’s taxes. Billionaires don’t need tax cuts, he said.
In his opening remarks, Obama criticized a Washington culture driven by opinion polls and nonstop political campaigns.
“But I don’t believe that the American people want us to focus on our job security, they want us to focus on their job security,” he said.
The president acknowledged that Republicans have joined Democrats in some efforts, such as sending more U.S. troops to Afghanistan. But he said he was disappointed and perplexed by virtually unanimous GOP opposition to other programs, such as the $787 billion economic stimulus bill enacted a year ago.
He also noted overwhelming Republican opposition to his proposed overhaul of the nation’s health care, which now is in legislative peril. Obama said he would gladly look at better ideas, but he urged Republicans to acknowledge the difficulties that many Americans face in obtaining good health care.
Obama said it makes ideological sense for Democrats and Republicans to work together on some issues such as charging fees to banks that benefited from a federal bailout, temporarily freezing some government spending, keeping jobs from being exported and paying for new government programs when they are created.
Republicans have sharply criticized Obama’s approach to most of these issues.
16 comments
You still aren't listening either. People like you complain that he hasn't been bipartisan, yet, when he makes an attempt to work with you, you come up with the same old arguments and insults.
Furthermore,if you don't like deficits then you must have been really unhappy between 2000-2008. If you don't like stimulus, you obviously don't support TARP. And if you are unhappy with health care reform, you obviously didn't support Medicare Part D.
So, rather than being a child and fostering the toxic environment you seen to like complaining about so much, why don't YOU try to be bipartisan?
You have to agree that Obama is trying to talk out both sides of his face when it comes to his call for bipartisanship.
When he had the 60 vote Senate super majority that benefited him, the Democrats weren't even willing to address anything the Republicans proposed.
They held deliberations in private (i.e. Democrats Only) yet Obama would make it sound like he wanted the Republicans in on the process, but his boys kept them shut out. He didn't care what absurd deals the Senate Dems were making to ensure they had the votes needed (read that as buying votes) to ram their bill thru the Senate.
Only now that they lost Kennedy's seat (the why's and how's of the loss don't matter) and no longer have the votes they need, they really must work TOGETHER with the Republicans and negotiate a bill that both parties are willing to sign off on.
Instead of saying "OK, what can we do to get you guys behind health care reform ?" What does he do? He scolds them and treats them like recalcitrant school children. As if it's their fault that there is no partisan negotiations going.
That shows Obama's true colors and just how arrogant the schmuck really is.
"Dodd Dumped"
Who is next ?
Himes you listening?
Where were the scumbag libs calling for bipartisanship before Scott Brown won?
Why is it all liberals must lie to get things done?
Typical arrogant liberal. Save America, outlaw liberals.
"I suppose all you Repubs forget that when you controlled both the presidency and congress from 2000 to 2006, you didn't let the Dems participate in any negotiations either."
Two wrongs don't make a right
"I suppose all you Repubs forget that when you controlled both the presidency and congress from 2000 to 2006, you didn't let the Dems participate in any negotiations either."
Two wrongs don't make a right"
That's right Frank and Obama will not going to break the trend. He's FOS.
I hope the left wing Democrats like Obama fail........
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