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Obama on the road to pitch health bill

ROADSHOW: President Obama fires up an audience at Arcadia University in Glenside, Pa., where he took his pitch for health care reform on Monday. He said people in Washington, D.C., are ROADSHOW: President Obama fires up an audience at Arcadia University in Glenside, Pa., where he took his pitch for health care reform on Monday. He said people in Washington, D.C., are "obsessed with the sport of politics" and weigh every decision against its impact on poll numbers. (Associated Press)
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Seeking to close the deal on a health care overhaul, President Obama is getting out of Washington, leaving the city he loves to bash and giving himself a platform to portray himself as an outsider going up against big insurance companies and their Capitol Hill lobbyists.

Just about every time Mr. Obama has faced a deadline or crunch on his marquee priority, he has exchanged a White House podium for a campaign-style forum outside the Beltway in a bid to break through the political wrangling, attack Republican detractors and reconnect with voters.

On Monday, Mr. Obama - backed by a trio of American flags - implored the audience at a suburban Philadelphia event to go door to door to drive up support for health care reform, an issue that has divided the country.

"When you're in Washington, folks respond to every issue, every decision, every debate, no matter how important it is, with the same question: What does this mean for the next election? What does it mean for your poll numbers? Is this good for Democrats or Republicans?" Mr. Obama mused before a largely student audience at Arcadia University in Glenside.

"That's just how Washington is. They can't help it. They're obsessed with the sport of politics," said Mr. Obama, who heads to St. Louis on Wednesday.

It's not lost on Mr. Obama that he and his allies have not fared well in that sport recently. His national disapproval rating on health care hovers at 52 percent compared with an approval rating of 39 percent, according to National Journal's Pollster.com average of national polls. Though Democrats still claim that the American public is on their side, Mr. Obama has retooled his argument in recent weeks to stress that health care reform is the right thing to do, regardless of political implications.

Presidential travel to plug a domestic priority is hardly novel. Mr. Obama's predecessor, George W. Bush, availed himself of the tactic as he unsuccessfully tried to overhaul the Social Security system in 2005.

"They're taking their case to the people," said Stephen Hess, a senior fellow emeritus at the Brookings Institution who served in the Eisenhower and Nixon administrations. "It shouldn't surprise anybody or be strange in any way. It means that they expect the people in turn to influence their legislators, which of course they do."

In some instances, Mr. Hess said, it also allows administrations to distance themselves from the Washington press corps in favor of local news outlets, where they are likely to benefit from longer staying power.

"They get three days of news: They get the news that they're going to be there, they get the news that they are there, and they get the news that they were there," he said.

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About the Author
Kara Rowland

Kara Rowland

Kara Rowland, White House reporter for The Washington Times, is a D.C.-area native. She graduated from the University of Virginia, where she studied American government and spent nearly all her waking hours working as managing editor of the Cavalier Daily, UVa.'s student newspaper.

Her interest in political reporting was piqued by an internship at Roll Call the summer before her ...

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