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About 100 people were expected, including celebrities Marc Anthony and Jennifer Lopez, the husband-and-wife part-owners of the Miami Dolphins. Elected officials from Pennsylvania and Wisconsin were also invited, including Pennsylvania Sens. Robert Casey, a Democrat, and Pat Toomey, a Republican, and Wisconsin Rep. Reid Ribble, a Republican who represents Green Bay. The menu featured beer from each state: Hinterland Pale Ale and Amber Ale from Wisconsin, and Yuengling Lager and Light, brewed in Pennsylvania, along with plenty of calorie-laden football fare: bratwurst, kielbasa, cheeseburgers, deep-dish pizza, Buffalo wings, potato salad, chips and dips, salad and ice cream, according to the White House. Asked about the crisis in Egypt, Obama said the country has been forever changed by the huge pro-democracy protests that began Jan. 25. He also played down prospects that the Muslim Brotherhood, a banned political and religious group in Egypt with strains of anti-U.S. ideology, would take a major role in any new government. On health care, Obama said a federal judge in Florida who recently struck down the entire law "was wrong." That judge said the requirement that nearly everyone have health insurance is unconstitutional. A different judge who reached the same conclusion in a separate case voided only that requirement. Judges in two other cases upheld the law. It's generally accepted that the U.S. Supreme Court will have the final word. Obama gave an indirect answer to O'Reilly's question about whether he's prepared for the law to "go down." Obama said only that he doesn't want to spend the next two years "refighting the battles of the last two years." The Fox News Channel host, a frequent Obama critic who called him "Robin Hood Obama" in a September 2008 interview during the presidential campaign, opened Sunday's meeting by thanking Obama and his administration for assisting two Fox reporters who'd gotten "roughed up" in Cairo. "Those guys could have died and I just want everybody to know the State Department really saved them," O'Reilly said. The Obama administration has had a contentious relationship with Fox, with some officials accusing it of operating like a wing of the Republican Party. But O'Reilly was not quite as combative Sunday. "I enjoy talking to you," O'Reilly said in closing. "I disagree with you sometimes. I hope you think I'm fair to you. I try to be, but I wish you well in the next two years."
[Associated
Press;
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