‘We answered the call of history’

March 22, 2010 11:55 am | Updated December 04, 2021 10:51 pm IST - WASHINGTON

President Barack Obama makes a statement on Sunday night following the final vote in the House of Representatives for comprehensive healthcare legislation, in the East Room of the White House.

President Barack Obama makes a statement on Sunday night following the final vote in the House of Representatives for comprehensive healthcare legislation, in the East Room of the White House.

Capping a long day and a consuming political journey, President Barack Obama celebrated the passage of healthcare legislation on Sunday with hugs, high fives and an emboldened attitude. Said the President to the nation, “Tonight, we answered the call of history.”

At nearly midnight in Washington, with a big swathe of country asleep or headed that way, Mr. Obama strode into the ornate East Room with Vice-President Joe Biden backing him. There was no hour too late for the President to embrace this moment.

“I want to thank every member of Congress who stood up tonight with courage and conviction to make healthcare reform a reality,” Mr. Obama said as the top members of his own healthcare team stood beaming nearby. “I know this wasn’t an easy vote for a lot of people. But it was the right vote.”

Mr. Obama was proud but not unrestrained in victory, mindful that the Senate still has not gotten to a companion Bill to fix problems with the one that just passed. The sense was one of perseverance after a debate with so many turns and doubts.

“We did not fear our future,” Mr. Obama said. “We shaped it.”

The final day had been a low-key one for Mr. Obama. No more fiery speeches, no trips to Capitol Hill, no ventures outside the White House gates at all.

Instead, the most visible spokesman for healthcare reform spent the final day of an exhaustive lobbying campaign out of public view.

Aides said he was roaming the West Wing, getting updates, calling legislators with thanks as a huge legislative win was imminent.

As the President said when he crashed a morning meeting of senior staff, this was a big day. But the spotlight fell on the House of Representatives.

The first glimpse of the President on Sunday did not come until late at night, after the final House vote on legislation to revamp health insurance rules for millions of people. But the announcement that he would give such a statement underscored that Mr. Obama was sensing victory — and history.

Beforehand, the White House released two photos showing hand-picked images of a President in a serious fight for votes until the end.

In one, Mr. Obama was on a cell phone talking to an unidentified legislator from the office of his chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel. The President was surrounded by Mr. Emanuel and four other legislative and political advisers. There wasn’t a smile in the room.

The other photo showed Mr. Obama in the Oval Office, sleeves rolled up, working the phones again in conversation with another unnamed legislator.

Mr. Obama called more than a dozen legislator on Sunday and got in touch with more than 90 during the week, the White House said without identifying them.

Before nightfall, the only burst of Mr. Obama news came in a press release.

Mr. Obama revealed he would issue an executive order to make sure that the emerging healthcare legislation would uphold all federal funding restrictions on abortion. That step had the enormously important effect of locking in the votes of a bloc of anti-abortion House Democrats.

After that, around the White House, it was mostly a matter of counting down until the House acted.

Mr. Obama watched the main House vote on the Senate-approved healthcare Bill in the Roosevelt Room with Mr. Biden and about 40 other members of the White House staff. When the Bill won enough votes to pass, the room burst into applause and hugs.

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