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But nothing will change for anyone until the House and Senate can settle on common legislation, pass it and send it to Obama to sign. The high stakes have both parties hoping they can find a few converts from the other side. Nearly every Republican in Congress has opposed the measures. "If some of the Republicans would come forward with suggestions -- offer a vote or two, or three or four
-- to take away the need to have every last one of the 60 Democrats, you'd have a much better bill in accordance with the tradition of the Congress, especially the Senate, on bipartisanship," said Democratic Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, himself a party switcher. Republican Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina voiced similar hope, to opposite ends: "a few Democrats to stand up in the House that maybe didn't before and help us stop this thing." DeMint, Van Hollen, Menendez and Specter spoke on "Fox News Sunday." Clyburn was on CBS' "Face the Nation" and CNN's "State of the Union."
[Associated
Press;
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