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Home » News » Politics

Monday, October 19, 2009

GOP to orchestrate health attacks

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  • MICHAEL CONNOR/THE WASHINGTON TIMES
"When we speak more in concert, our message tends to break through more effectively," says Rep. Mike Pence of Indiana, talking about Republican efforts to stir up public opposition to a health care bill.

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By Kara Rowland

House Republicans are planning an interest-group strategy to try to stop a health care bill and will spend the next three weeks arguing that the Democrats' measure will be a bad deal for small businesses, senior citizens, and women and children.

With Republican lawmakers vastly outnumbered in the chamber, party leaders say their best strategy is to sway the public against Democrats' health care plans. The best way to do that, they say, is to synchronize their messaging to focus on specific groups that could suffer from effects of the bill.

"What we want to do in the coming weeks is have all 178 members redouble their efforts to take the case against a government takeover of health care to the four corners of this country," House Republican Conference Chairman Mike Pence said in an interview. "When we speak more in concert, our message tends to break through more effectively."

Time is running out for Republicans to derail the legislation as Democratic leaders in both chambers work to merge the three House bills and two Senate bills. While Republicans in the Senate hope to slow the debate and use amendments to alter the final bill, procedural rules in the House make Republicans there virtually irrelevant.

"What we have here is a desire to recognize that we are approaching some kind of a culmination point in this debate," said Mr. Pence, of Indiana. "They've gone from regular order to smoke-filled rooms so there's no real way of knowing when [the final bills] are going to emerge."

Mr. Pence said his side of the aisle has broken down the three health care bills passed out of the House and their implications on seniors, families and businesses. They plan to highlight these themes in subsequent weeks by holding press conferences and town-hall meetings along with organized floor speeches and media appearances.

House Democrats continue to hammer their GOP counterparts for lacking an official plan, though individual Republicans have introduced legislation. Consistently labeling Republicans the "party of no," Democrats say the American people are on their side.

"The American people are so smart," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, California Democrat, told reporters last week. "I see some of the polls this week, 62-31 they support a public option."

Sen. Arlen Specter, Pennsylvania Republican-turned-Democrat, took aim at his former party on "Fox News Sunday," calling it "a party of obstructionism."

"You have responsible Republicans who had been in the Senate, like Howard Baker and Bob Dole and Bill Frist, who say Republicans ought to cooperate," Mr. Specter said. "Well, they're not cooperating."

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