WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama said Wednesday he’s ready to sign “good, bipartisan” legislation protecting physicians from steep cuts in Medicare reimbursements as Senate Democrats seemed to soften their opposition to the package.
Obama’s remark, made a day before the House is expected to approve the measure, seemed to add political momentum to the package’s prospects in the Senate, where Minority Leader Harry Reid and others had complained about abortion curbs and other provisions. The overall bill is a compromise worked out by House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.
“As we speak, Congress is working to fix the Medicare payment system. I’ve got my pen ready to sign a good bipartisan bill,” the president said at a White House event marking the five-year anniversary of his signing his health care overhaul.
Earlier Wednesday, No. 3 Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York said the Medicare bill’s restrictions on abortions at community health centers were not as “severe” as abortion curbs in a separate bill on human trafficking Democrats are blocking.