Obama, Republicans clash at health summit

Obama told about 40 congressional leaders his comprehensive  overhaul was “absolutely critical” to a sustained economic  recovery, but Republicans said he should scrap the current  plans and start over with a smaller approach.

“There are some fundamental differences between us that we  cannot paper over,” Jon Kyl, the No. 2 Senate Republican, told  Obama, adding his plan gave Washington too much power over the  health system and took it away from patients and doctors.

“We do not agree about the fundamental question of who  should be in charge,” Kyl said.

Obama hoped the day-long summit at Blair House, the  presidential guest house across the street from the White  House, would revive momentum in Congress for his faltering  attempt to make healthcare more affordable and extend coverage  to tens of millions of uninsured Americans.

He admitted it might not be possible to bridge the  differences with Republicans but said “I thought it was  worthwhile for us to make this effort.”

Afterward, Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell said he  was “discouraged” by the summit’s outcome and thought it was  clear Democrats planned to ram through a version of the  Senate-passed healthcare plan.

Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid seemed to reinforce  that view, telling reporters: “It is time to do something and  we are going to do it.”

Obama had urged lawmakers to go beyond political theatre  and partisan finger-pointing during the summit, but the polite  tone was interrupted several times by tense exchanges with  Republicans, including his 2008 presidential foe John McCain.

When McCain questioned whether Obama had delivered on the  political change he promised, Obama curtly reminded him: “We’re  not campaigning anymore. The election is over.”  McCain  responded with a laugh: “I’m reminded of that every day.”

Republican Senator Lamar Alexander and Obama also clashed  on whether Democratic plans would raise insurance premiums,  with each interrupting the other to make their points.

Health insurer stocks closed slightly higher yesterday,  performing better than the broader U.S. market as investor  concerns waned about a sweeping healthcare reform that would  hurt profits. Analysts said they expected a much more diluted  version of the plan would eventually be adopted.

Shares in WellPoint rose 2.2 percent, Aetna gained 1.4  percent and Humana rose 0.5 percent. The Morgan Stanley  Healthcare Payor Index was nearly unchanged.

“I think that investors recognize that all the bad news  about how reform might affect insurance companies is already  behind us,” said Dave Shove, analyst for BMO Capital Markets.

The summit debate broke no new ground in the healthcare  debate, with Republicans calling the bills too costly and  saying they would mean more taxes, more regulations and higher  premiums for consumers.

“This 2,700-page bill will bankrupt our country,” said  House Republican leader John Boehner. The Congressional Budget  Office has said the bills would reduce the budget deficit by  about $100 billion over the next 10 years.

Obama dominated the speaking time at the 7-hour summit,  rebutting many of the Republican charges and sometimes chiding  Republican critics for reverting to “talking points” in their  comments.

“He actually consumed more time than all the Republicans  combined and Democrats combined,” Republican Kyl said. “It  wasn’t a matter of just inviting us down and listening to our  ideas, he wanted to argue with us.”

Republicans promoted their own scaled-back approach to  boost competition across state lines, create high-risk  insurance pools and curtail medical malpractice lawsuits. They  stacked the Democratic bill on their table to show its size and  said their opposition represented the view of most Americans.

“We have to start by taking the current bill and putting it  on the shelf and starting from a clean sheet of paper,”  Alexander said. “This is a car that can’t be recalled and  fixed.”

Obama and his fellow Democrats made it clear they have no  intention of starting over, but Obama hopes to win over  wavering Democratic lawmakers and rally support among voters  who have lost enthusiasm for the effort to reshape the $2.5  trillion U.S. healthcare industry.

The bills passed by the Democratic-controlled House and  Senate late last year were designed to rein in costs, regulate  insurers and expand coverage to more than 30 million more  Americans.

But efforts to merge them and send a final version to Obama  collapsed in January after Democrats lost their crucial 60th  Senate vote in a special election in Massachusetts amid broad  public dissatisfaction with the healthcare drive.