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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Obama: Compromise needed on health care

President Barack Obama met with governors at the White House on Wednesday, including Vermont Gov. Jim Douglas and  Washington Gov. Chris  Gregoire.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Margaret Talev And David Lightman McClatchy

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama on Wednesday rejected the idea of fully taxing Americans’ employer-provided health insurance benefits, but suggested he might be persuaded to tax so-called Cadillac coverage, benefits worth perhaps more than $13,000 a year, in the interest of a compromise with Congress.

“I continue to believe that’s the wrong way to do it,” the president said in an ABC News special taped Wednesday in the East Room of the White House. The town-hall-style event included an audience of 164 invited guests and was aired exclusively on ABC.

Obama said he would prefer to pay for expanded coverage by eliminating some deductions for higher-earning taxpayers but that “there’s going to have to be some compromise.”

The special, which drew the ire of Republicans because it didn’t include them, came as Obama intensifies his campaign to overhaul the nation’s health care system. Polls show Americans want but fear change, and a divided Congress is grappling over what to do.

Obama said he understands Americans’ trepidation about changing the system: “They know that they’re living with the devil, but the devil they know they think may be better than the devil they don’t.” He said any reform would be phased in, not happen overnight.

Appearing earlier Wednesday on ABC’s “Good Morning America,” Obama said that he “absolutely” expects Congress to pass comprehensive health care legislation by year’s end.

Obama also met at the White House on Wednesday with five governors who are part of a bipartisan group that recently hosted health care roundtables around the country.

“There’s no perfect unanimity across the table in terms of every single aspect of reform,” the president said in remarks after their meeting. “I think everybody here wants to make sure that governors have flexibility, that they have input into how legislation is being shaped on the Hill.”