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Their most immediate problem is the stalled health care overhaul. Options include using all their remaining political muscle to pass a Senate measure under rules that bar filibusters, which could require only modest trims to the party's original proposals. Another option would significantly dilute the initial efforts in hopes of attracting some Republican votes. The White House and congressional leaders had hoped to settle on a strategy by this weekend. But an accord was thwarted by disagreements among House Democrats, mixed signals from Obama and the issue's complexity. "We need to take some time to look at what's happening here," said Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn. Taking no action at all, she said, "is not the right thing."
In the longer run, Democrats' chief dilemma may be deciding how to campaign this fall, given that Obama in 2008 advocated every key feature in the health care legislation that now seems unpopular with many Americans. Some party activists say they must do a better job of explaining how the bills would help middle-class people who already have insurance. Others say they paid a high price for a widely criticized benefit for Nebraska, which many people saw as a payoff to secure the vote of Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb. Many Democratic lawmakers want to resolve the health debate quickly and turn their focus to jobs. Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., who chairs his party's House campaign team, did not mention health care in his statement following Brown's win in Massachusetts. He focused on a favorite target that some colleagues fear is losing its potency: George W. Bush. In the midterm elections, Van Hollen said, Democrats will resist "the same failed Bush-Cheney policies that brought our economy to the brink of collapse." On Thursday, he called the Supreme Court ruling on campaign funds "scandalous." Feehery, the GOP consultant, said Democrats don't seem to understand the public's frustration. Obama vowed to end the old politics of backroom dealmaking and favors to special interests, Feehery said, but voters see huge bailouts for banks and automakers, plus the "Cornhusker kickback" to Nelson.
"Obama promised to change things," Feehery said, "and it's the same-old, same-old." The Democratic-leaning group Third Way looked for a bright spot this week. "We have nearly 11 months to adjust and prepare," the group said in a memo. In 1994, when a GOP landslide gave Republicans control of Congress, "Democrats didn't realize the wave was upon them until the August recess."
[Associated
Press;
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