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Comment: Is Obama ailing on health care?

  • Story Highlights
  • Analyst: Reforming U.S. health care appears one of Obama's hardest tasks
  • Obama's Republican opponents sense an opportunity to oppose president's reforms
  • U.S. spends more on its healthcare than any other industrial county
  • Nearly 50M people are without routine care, something Obama wants to address
By Jonathan Mann
CNN
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(CNN) -- U.S. President Barack Obama is trying to reform American health care, and it may be weakening the pulse of his presidency.

President Obama takes on critics of health care legislation in remarks Tuesday at the White House.

President Obama takes on critics of health care legislation in remarks Tuesday at the White House.

"We always knew that passing health care reform wouldn't be easy," he said this week. "We always knew that doing what was right would be hard."

In fact, after six months in office during which he's benefited from widespread support on issues ranging from Iraq to the economy, nothing has seemed harder. What should Obama do about U.S. health care? Can he learn anything from other nations? Tell us.

Right now, the U.S. spends more on its health than any other industrial county but still leaves nearly 50 million of its people without routine care. Obama wants lawmakers to find a way to provide health insurance to all Americans while holding down prices. Several Congressional committees have been struggling to come up with new plans and the early results have been complicated, controversial and costly.

The process is starting to take its toll in public opinion. Obama is still popular. An ABC News-Washington Post poll found that 59 percent of Americans approve of how he's doing his job. But on health care, he's slipped below 50 percent for the first time, with just 49 percent approving of his efforts on the issue.

Hoping to fight that loss of momentum, he's scheduled daily television appearances to campaign for quick work from Congress, and his political organization is running ads on TV too.

He's keeping his distance from most details of the debate, but putting all of his personal popularity to work to get a plan with enough public support to be enacted.

"Presidents don't work this hard when thing's are going well," said CNN's Candy Crowley. "They work this hard when something's in jeopardy."

The president's opponents in the Republican Party sense an opportunity that extends far beyond the healthcare debate.

"If we're able to stop Obama on this, it will be his Waterloo," said Republican Senator Jim Demint. "It will break him."

Obama doesn't seem like he's about to be "broken," but ironically, on health care he looks like he could be ailing.

All About Barack ObamaHealth Care Issues

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