from TPM:
http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2010/03/dems-to-white-house-enough-with-the-health-care-timelines-already.phpMarch 9, 2010, 8:09PM
Congressional Democrats are under increasing pressure to finish up health care reform, but they've had enough of the White House dictating deadlines to them. And at a bicameral leadership meeting this afternoon--attended by White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel and other administration officials--they made that very clear.
"I was at a meeting with Rahm Emanuel and he was certainly informed that we don't feel that we want any deadline assigned to us," House Energy and Commerce Chairman Henry Waxman told a few reporters outside of a Democratic caucus meeting this evening. "We want to pass the bill, we want to make sure it's the way it should be, and soon as possible, but we don't feel that we have to have any particular deadline."
I asked Waxman how Emanuel reacted to the pushback?
"He said he would pass it on," Waxman said with a smirk.
Emerging from the bicameral meeting, Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin described deadlines as "a blessing and a curse."
If it wasn't already clear to the Obama administration that the pressure was unwelcome, it is now.
read more:
http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2010/03/dems-to-white-house-enough-with-the-health-care-timelines-already.php_________________________
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) and the White House on Tuesday engaged in a rare public dispute over when healthcare reform will be voted on.
Hoyer on Tuesday morning suggested the March 18 deadline recently set by White House press secretary Robert Gibbs was not endorsed by congressional leaders.
“None of us have mentioned the 18th other than Mr. Gibbs,” Hoyer told reporters when asked if March 18 was still a “viable” date for the House to vote on the Senate bill, a package of legislative fixes and a possible third item dealing with abortion language.
Gibbs didn’t back down Tuesday afternoon, saying there “seems to be a disconnect” between Congress and the White House before stopping himself to add, “This was information I was given based on conversations that people had in this building with Capitol Hill.”
He also said, “I’ve been given nothing that would change that advice that I was given last week.”
Gibbs, a former Senate aide, first threw down the March 18 deadline last week, citing President Barack Obama’s desire to sign healthcare legislation prior to an overseas trip he is scheduled to begin that day.
“Our objective is to pass both healthcare and the 2010 budget before the Easter break,” Hoyer said. “Is that going to be difficult? Yes. Is it a deadline? No.
“If we can, we can. If we can’t, we can’t,” Hoyer added. “We will continue to pursue both items.”
read more:
http://thehill.com/homenews/house/85825-disconnect-gibbs-hoyer-dispute-vote