Democratic Whip James Clyburn Says says House still short on health votes
Posted by webmasterMar 14
In an amazing slap in the face to the majority of Americans that oppose President Obama’s health care reform, house democrats, being pushed by President Obama and speaker of the house Nancy Pelosi, seem poised to pass one of the most unpopular pieces of legislation to come along in more than eighty years.
With President Barack Obama’s sweeping healthcare overhaul headed for a final House vote this week, House Democratic Whip James Clyburn said Democrats were short for now of the 216 votes needed for approval but he was confident they could find them.
“We don’t have them as of this morning, but we’ve been working this thing all weekend, we’ll be working it going into the week, I’m also very confident that we’ll get this done,” Clyburn, the No. 3 House Democrat who is entrusted with lining up the party’s votes, said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
Senior White House adviser David Axelrod and spokesman Robert Gibbs appeared on a series of Sunday morning talk shows to say the stalled overhaul, Obama’s top legislative priority, was headed for approval in the House this week.
“I think we will have the votes to pass this,” Axelrod said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”
Obama delayed his first overseas trip of the year this week to help round up votes for healthcare reform, the focus of a long-running political brawl with Republican opponents that has consumed the U.S. Congress for the last nine months.
House Democrats are scrambling to win final passage of the Senate’s healthcare bill among Democrats unhappy with key provisions — including language on the ban on federal funding for abortion — and nervous about November’s elections in which Republicans could challenge their control of Congress.
In a two-step process, House Democrats want to approve the Senate’s version of the bill sometime this week and make the changes sought by Obama and House Democrats through a separate measure passed under budget reconciliation rules.
Those rules require only a simple majority in the 100-member Senate, bypassing the need for 60 votes to overcome Republican procedural hurdles. The House and Senate hope to finish work on the second bill before starting a two-week Easter recess on March 26.
“I think the House will have passed the Senate bill a week from today,” Gibbs said on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”
Tags: health care reform, healthcare reform, James Clyburn, Nancy Pelosi, President Barack Obama, Robert Gibbs, White House

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