Greg Sargent is reporting that the White House has "privately told Dem Congressional aides that the White House supports the House passing the Senate bill with a reconciliation fix."
The private communications will lend a bit of cheer to those who had hoped the White House would use its heft to help Congress break its logjam by endorsing a specific route to getting reform done.
Obama and the White House have not publicly stated a preference on how they’d like Congressional Dems to proceed. But White House aides have privately made it clear to the Dem leadership that they support the approach many Dems are coalescing behind: The House passing the Senate bill, with fixes made by the Senate via reconciliation, the sources say.
“In staff level discussions, the White House has made it clear that it supports making changes to the Senate bill through reconciliation because that is the only way to pass comprehensive health care reform,” one of the Dem Congressional aides familiar with ongoing talks tells me.
“They support this strategy,” a second Democratic aide familiar with the talks says, referring to the White House. “The alternatives are so bad they’re not worth asking about.”
House leadership, including Pelosi and Clyburn, has consistently reiterated that the votes would be there to pass the Senate bill if the reconciliation fix passes first, but that's from the progressive side of the caucus. The unanswered question is whether Stupak is going to be able to convince enough of his cohorts to buck the rest of the House, the Senate, and the White House to obstruct the bill.