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Obama also toured a Brooklyn high school to showcase a rare program that lets students finish high school with an associate's degree in computers or engineering. A school gymnasium as his backdrop, Obama framed the budget talks set to resume next week by urging Congress to put more money into education and other programs he said lead to growth. "Don't tell me we can afford to shut down the government, which costs our economy billions of dollars, but we can't afford to invest in our education systems," Obama said. The political blow to the GOP from the crisis has made some Democrats more bullish about retaking the House next year
-- a tall order that, if successful, would bolster Obama's prospects for achieving sweeping second-term goals that Republicans refuse to consider. But at the same time, Obama is weighed down by the calamitous debut of the website for new insurance exchanges, raising the prospect that Obama's health care law will be more of a liability than an asset in 2014 even for Democrats who supported the law. Obama made no mention of the website or its ongoing issues in his remarks to donors Friday. "I would take our position over theirs any day of the week," said Mo Elleithee, the Democratic National Committee's communications director. "We have been working to give people more benefits and increase their access to affordable health care, while Republicans shut down the government." Traditionally, the president is a party's most potent fundraising tool. But Republicans say that's where Obama's usefulness to his party ends. After all, the health insurance program remains a tough sell even with independent voters, and Obama is personally unpopular in many of the Southern, conservative-leaning states holding critical Senate elections next year. "There's still not one Democrat candidate in a toss-up race who wants him visiting their district, because they know he's not wanted anywhere other than New York, San Francisco or Chicago," said Daniel Scarpinato, a National Republican Congressional Committee official.
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