Obama to speak about health care in Iowa City

By ASSOCIATED PRESS   Monday, March 22, 2010
ADVERTISEMENT
 

PhotoVideo


In this March 3, 2010, file photo President Barack Obama pauses while speaking about health care reform in the East Room of the White House in Washington. With private pitches to Democrats Obama begins an all-out push to coax Congress into passing his health care proposals, while confronting party unrest on his left and right, calling for political courage, citing historic opportunities, and essentially saying "trust me."

In this March 3, 2010, file photo President Barack Obama pauses while speaking about health care reform in the East Room of the White House in Washington. With private pitches to Democrats Obama begins an all-out push to coax Congress into passing his health care proposals, while confronting party unrest on his left and right, calling for political courage, citing historic opportunities, and essentially saying "trust me."

— President Barack Obama will speak about health care Thursday in Iowa City, marking passage of the historic legislation by returning to the place where he proposed his reform plan in 2007 while campaigning for the Democratic nomination.

Obama will "discuss how health care insurance reform lowers costs for small businesses and American families and gives them more control over their health care," said Matthew Lehrich, a White House spokesman.

The visit will come four days after the House approved a bill extending health care to millions of uninsured Americans and preventing insurance companies from denying coverage on the basis of pre-existing medical conditions. Obama could sign the bill as soon as Tuesday.

Obama chose Iowa City because the eastern Iowa college town was where he first offered his health care plan on May 29, 2007. Lehrich said the plan launched "a grassroots campaign for reform that led directly to the legislation passed this week."

Obama announced his health care plan about eight months before Iowa's caucuses, where he had a surprisingly strong win and gained the momentum that ultimately led to the Democratic nomination. In the 2008 general election, Obama easily won Iowa's seven electoral votes.

Although Obama's support of health care reform was key in the support he received in the caucuses, the president will find widely divergent opinions on the issue in Iowa.

All three Republican candidates for governor opposed Obama's health care plan, with state Rep. Rod Roberts and businessman Bob Vander Plaats calling for amending the Iowa Constitution to block the measure.

Vander Plaats described it as "federalism run amok at best and, at worst, a big step toward socialism."

GOP gubernatorial candidate Terry Branstad hasn't said whether he'd support a constitutional amendment, but he issued a statement Monday criticizing the reform plan.

"We can ill afford another trillion dollars in spending by the federal government," Branstad said.

Democratic Gov. Chet Culver has been a strong supporter of Obama's health care proposal.

Longtime Democratic activist Jerry Crawford said he believes support for the plan will grown in the state, and nationally, over time.

"The advantage he has is the opposition was so over the top in predicting that the world would end," Crawford said. "Sooner rather than later people are going to figure out that the world didn't end."

Drake University political science professor Dennis Goldford said he thought passage of the health care bill would give Obama a boost or at least avoid the mess the president would have faced if it had failed.

"If he had lost this it would have been disastrous," said Goldford. "People would be saying that Democrats can't govern."

Mark Daley, a Democratic strategist who is working for Democratic Senate hopeful Roxanne Conlin, said Obama's visit would put the spotlight on Sen. Charles Grassley.

Grassley, who is seeking a sixth term in the Senate, worked through last summer with Democrats on health care reform but eventually became a prominent opponent of the effort.

"This presidential visit is great for us because it's going to remind Iowans of what they have in Washington," Daley said, referring to Grassley.

Grassley issued a statement predicting the measure approved by the House would raise taxes, hurt Medicare and cause health insurance premiums to rise.

"Rather than bring the country together around some commonsense reforms, this bill has driven the country further apart, at the very time we need to come together, especially for economic recovery efforts," he said.







reader COMMENTS

Before you post a comment, consider this:

Note: Walworthcountytoday.com does not condone or review every comment. Read more in our User Policy Agreement
  • Keep it clean. Comments that are obscene, vulgar or sexually oriented will be removed. Creative spelling of such terms or implied use of such language is banned, also.
  • Don't threaten to hurt or kill anyone.
  • Be nice. No racism, sexism or any other sort of -ism that degrades another person.
  • Harassing comments. If you are the subject of a harassing comment or personal attack by another user, do not respond in-kind.  Hit the "Suggest Removal" button on offensive comments.
  • Share what you know. Give us your eyewitness accounts, background, observations and history.
  • Do not libel anyone. Libel is writing something false about someone that damages that person's reputation.
  • Ask questions. What more do you want to know about the story?
  • Stay focused. Keep on the story's topic.
  • Help us get it right. If you spot a factual error or misspelling, email onlineeditor@communityshoppers.com or
    call 1-262-728-3424, extension 108
  • Remember, this is our site. We set the rules, and we reserve the right to remove any comments that we deem inappropriate.

Post Comment

Commenting requires registration.

Username:
Password: (Forgotten your password?)

Comment:

ADVERTISEMENT