July 24, 2009

This is the Republican Party's national chairman, Michael Steele.
"The Barack Obama experiment with America is a risk our country cannot afford. It is too much, too fast, too soon," he said.
After months of being on the defensive in the aftermath of last November's presidential election, many Republicans see stopping the Obama health-care plan as an opportunity to turn their political fortunes around.
Public support for health-care reform slipping
Recent public-opinion polls show that while Mr. Obama remains personally popular, support for his policies on the economy and health-care reform are slipping.
Andy Barr is with the political website Politico, which conducted a recent poll.
"Across the board in this poll, trust has dropped off about ten percent for the president. Trust for some of his top programs including the economic stimulus package has dropped off, and you know there are some concerns for the other side of his legislative agenda," he said.
With all this as a backdrop, the president has refocused his energies in recent days on winning back public support for the health-care effort.
Matt Dallek is a political expert at the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington.
"He is attempting to really seize control over the health-care debate and to send a message to the country that, 'I am in charge, you know, I am the one running the show, and we have got to get reform passed," he said.
Dallek also said that by making health care his top priority, President Obama has raised the political stakes by gambling that he can pass an expensive reform plan at a time when the country struggles to recover from an economic downturn.
"He really has staked a large chunk of his first term in office, obviously we do not know if he is going to get a second one, on whether he can get health care done, and done right. I do not see how, if he does not get something passed, how he recovers, at least right away," he added.
Congress divided over reform
The president would prefer congressional action on health care within a matter of weeks, but even some Democrats believe it is more likely that the reform effort will drag on for months.
Richard Wolffe is a political analyst for MSNBC television and a guest on VOA's Press Conference USA program.
"With something as difficult and as big as remaking the health-care system in any country, especially in America, the chances are that the longer they debate this, the less will happen. So, he does have to drive this hard," he said.
But expert Matt Dallek believes opposition Republicans have raised enough questions about the reform effort to slow it down.
"Republicans have been able to get, I think, some traction with this idea that the government is expanding in all kinds of ways that are going to have unintended consequences and unforeseen effects on your lives," he said.
There are divisions over the reform effort among congressional Democrats as well. Conservative Democrats worry the estimated $1 trillion cost of overhauling health care would add to the already expanding government budget deficit.
In an effort to address those concerns at his news conference Wednesday, Mr. Obama said he would not sign a bill that adds to the deficit.
Voice of America. The Voice of America, which first went on the air in 1942, is a multimedia international broadcasting service funded by the U.S. Government through the Broadcasting Board of Governors.
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