By CHARLES BABINGTON
Associated Press
September 29, 2007
WASHINGTON - President Bush insisted to House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi Friday that he is going
ahead with his promised veto of a major
expansion of a children's health program
despite its overwhelming approval by
Congress.
Pelosi, D-Calif., said she told Bush in a
morning phone call that she was praying he
would change his mind. "I think I have to
pray a little harder," she told reporters
moments later, at a Capitol ceremony where
Democrats celebrated passage of the proposed
$35 billion increase in the State Children's
Health Insurance Program.
It's doubtful that any new arguments were
made in what Pelosi called "a friendly,
friendly conversation." She said she reminded
Bush that many Republicans voted to raise
tobacco taxes to fund a program expansion,
and that many governors from both parties
support it.
"He said he liked people who don't give up,"
Pelosi said, but he also made it clear he is
not backing down.
White House press secretary Dana Perino
confirmed Pelosi's account.
"The president has been very clear for months
that if the bill came to him in its current
form that he would veto it," Perino said.
She added: "What he did say is, `I'm going to
veto this bill, and after that, let's see if
we can sit down and come to a
compromise.'"
Congress and Bush have agreed to fund SCHIP
at its current level at least through
mid-November.
Aware that the issue could be politically
explosive, the White House released a day
early the part of the president's radio
address that dealt with the insurance
program. In the address, Bush urged lawmakers
to "work out a more responsible
approach."
"Congressional leaders have put forward an
irresponsible plan that would dramatically
expand this program beyond its original
intent," he said in the remarks, which were
taped Friday and being aired Saturday. "And
they know I will veto it."
Eighteen Republicans joined a solid
Democratic block Thursday when the Senate
voted 67-29 for the $35 billion expansion.
The House passed the bill Tuesday, 265-159,
with 45 Republicans voting for it.
A veto override requires a two-thirds
majority vote in both chambers, a threshold
that Republicans say they can prevent in the
House. Bush is likely to receive the
legislation next week, lawmakers said.
Bush has proposed a $5 billion increase in
SCHIP, which now covers 6.6 million children
from modest-income families that are not poor
enough to qualify for Medicaid. The bill
approved this week by Congress, he says, is
too costly, goes beyond the program's
original intent, and shifts too much
insurance burden on the government rather
than private providers.
Analysts say the legislation would allow
about 4 million of the estimated 9 million
uninsured children in the United States to
gain coverage.
Health and Human Services Secretary Mike
Leavitt said SCHIP should be focused on
children from families with incomes that fall
below twice the federal poverty level -
$34,340 for a family of three. Leavitt said
the administration wants to talk with
lawmakers about other steps that can be taken
to help uninsured children from families
above that income level.
Democrats feel the SCHIP program is popular,
and sense a political blunder on the part of
Bush and his congressional allies. Friday's
Democratic event, which included Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., featured
several small children whose families have
relied on SCHIP for medical coverage.
Cameras clicked and whirred as Pelosi briefly
held a small boy, and his Elmo doll, on her
lap. She said there "are 10 million reasons"
for Bush to sign the bill, citing the number
of children the proposed expansion would cover.