U.S. congressional Democrats prepared for a final push to pass health-care reform without Republican support, even as President Barack Obama said on Tuesday he would explore adding more Republican ideas to his proposal.
House of Representatives Democratic leader Steny Hoyer said he saw the possibility of gaining support for Mr. Obama's sweeping health-care overhaul from Democrats who voted "no" when the House considered it in November.
"We're talking to everybody," Mr. Hoyer said. "Do I think there is a possibility of some people changing? Yes I do."
Mr. Obama is expected to announce his plans on Wednesday for forging ahead with an overhaul of the $2.5-trillion (U.S.) health-care system, with Democrats preparing to use a procedure called reconciliation that allows Senate approval by a simple majority vote.
That approach, which can be used only for budget-related measures, would bypass rules that require 60 votes to clear procedural hurdles in the 100-member Senate. Reconciliation needs only a simple Senate majority of 51 votes.
With congressional elections approaching in November, Democrats are anxious to move past the health-care debate and talk about job creation and the economy.
In a letter to congressional leaders from both parties, Mr. Obama said he was considering adding ideas offered by Republicans last week at a day-long health-care summit but did not agree with their demand for a more incremental approach.
Mr. Obama said he was open to Republican ideas for undercover probes of health-care providers who get federal money, to expanding health savings accounts and to providing more grants to study alternatives to medical malpractice lawsuits.
"I said throughout this process that I'd continue to draw on the best ideas from both parties, and I'm open to these proposals in that spirit," Mr. Obama said in the letter.
Democrats in the Senate and House passed health-care bills last year that would reshape the industry by cutting costs, regulating insurers and expanding coverage to tens of millions of Americans.
But efforts to merge the different measures and send a final version to Mr. Obama collapsed in January after Democrats lost their crucial 60th Senate seat in a special election in Massachusetts.
Using reconciliation to pass the final health-care bill would be a two-step process. The House would approve the Senate-passed bill and changes to the Senate bill sought by the House would be passed separately through reconciliation.
Many of those changes, such as adjustments to a tax on high-cost insurance plans and additional federal subsidies to make coverage more affordable, were incorporated in a proposal released by Mr. Obama last week.
He is expected to adjust that package as part of his announcement on Wednesday and his letter appeared to signal some of the additional Republican proposals he will add.
Democrats still face a challenge in getting the measure through the House, which passed the overhaul with only three votes to spare in November.
Mr. Hoyer said he was confident of winning more Democratic converts because "when bills change, members look at it somewhat differently."
Republicans have criticized any effort to use reconciliation on the health-care bill, even though they have used it to pass bills at least 14 times since 1980.
"Democrats are saying they want a simple up-or-down vote on health care. What they really want is to jam their vision of health care through Congress over the objections of a public that they seem to think is too ill-informed to notice," Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said.
Republicans plan to raise many objections and offer a flood of amendments during the process, hoping to extend the debate and force Democrats into multiple difficult votes ahead of November's election.