WRAPUP 4-US House Democrats scramble for healthcare votes

Fri Nov 6, 2009 10:02pm EST
 
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(For full coverage of U.S. healthcare reform, click [nN20512341])

* Democrats still hunting for 218 House votes on health

* Hoyer says "we're very close" to the needed support

* He says final vote could be delayed to Sunday or beyond (Adds Waxman quote, details on abortion battle)

By John Whitesides

WASHINGTON, Nov 6 (Reuters) - Democratic leaders in the U.S. House of Representatives scrambled on Friday to allay lingering concerns about a broad healthcare overhaul and said a landmark vote planned for Saturday could slip a day or more.

President Barack Obama and top administration officials called undecided Democrats to plead for support, and House leaders held talks with wavering members to nail down their backing.

Democrats were short of the 218 votes they need to pass the measure, but House Democratic leader Steny Hoyer said "we're very close." House members were warned the final vote could slip to Sunday or even later in the week.

Democrats cajoled dozens of party moderates concerned about abortion and immigration provisions in the bill, as well as its $1 trillion price tag and its possible effect on budget deficits.

"There are many people who are still looking to get a comfort level that this is the right thing to do," Hoyer said. "We're trying to answer any concerns they might have."

The sweeping overhaul, Obama's top domestic priority, would spark the biggest changes in the U.S. healthcare system since the creation of the Medicare health program for the elderly in 1965.

House Republicans are united in opposition to the measure, designed to rein in costs, expand coverage to millions of uninsured and bar insurance practices such as denying coverage to people with pre-existing conditions.

Republicans object to new taxes to pay for the changes and the potential impact on the budget, and say the government is meddling in private healthcare and insurance markets.

LATE-NIGHT NEGOTIATIONS

Democrats on both sides of the abortion issue negotiated late into the night in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office, considering proposals to strengthen the bill's provisions to ensure federal subsidies are not used to pay for abortions.

About 40 moderate House Democrats have threatened to oppose the bill without the changes, but members who favor abortion rights said they would not allow the bill to exceed current restrictions on using federal money to finance abortions.  Continued...

 

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