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Obama Urges Families’ Support For Healthcare Agenda
After weeks of urging lawmakers to embrace his health care agenda, President Barack Obama is taking his case back to the road as the public’s qualms about the plan seem to be growing.
In his comments and at scheduled events in Cleveland, the president spoke directly to families about their pocketbook and medical concerns, urging them to ignore political opportunists in order to achieve sweeping changes, which previous administrations could not attain.
“If we do not reform health care, your premiums and out-of-pocket costs will continue to skyrocket,” looking past the dozens of reporters assembled for his White House news conference and peering straight into the TV cameras. Obama said “If we do not act, 14,000 Americans will continue to lose their health insurance every single day.”
On Thursday in Ohio, the president will undertake two more events focused on health care, the issue dominating his administration even as the economy still suffers and wars continue in Iraq and Afghanistan. For his supporters, Obama’s stepped-up pace is coming not a second too soon.
For all his efforts, which have included public statements each weekday for the past few weeks, Republican lawmakers and other critics sense momentum building against Obama’s plan. They particularly cite nonpartisan cost projections that have not predicted the savings the White House promises.
“What I heard last night was a president that seems somewhat frustrated that people do not understand what this government health care plan is all about,” Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia, the House Republican whip, said on NBC’s “Today” show. “I think people still have a lot of questions about what a (new) health care plan means for them and their families.”
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, another leading Republican, said on CBS’s “The Early Show” that he “liked a lot of what he (Obama) had to say last night.”
The number of Americans who disapprove of the president’s health care plan has jumped to 43 percent, compared with 28 percent in April, according to the latest Associated Press-GfK poll. Obama still holds a strong hand, with most Americans favorable to him in general, and half supporting his health care agenda.
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