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Obama presses lawmakers to OK new bailout funds

David Espo and Jim Kuhnhenn - Associated Press

Issue date: 1/7/09 Section: News
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President-elect Barack Obama, accompanied by National Economic Council Director-designate Lawrence Summers, second from right, and others, leaves a Democratic policy luncheon on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2009. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
President-elect Barack Obama, accompanied by National Economic Council Director-designate Lawrence Summers, second from right, and others, leaves a Democratic policy luncheon on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2009. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

WASHINGTON (AP) - Tested before taking power, President-elect Barack Obama appealed to Democrats in Congress on Tuesday to allow the use of an additional $350 billion in federal bailout funds and vowed to veto any move to block the money.

Obama backed up his plea with a promise to revise elements of the original bailout program that have drawn widespread criticism, pledging that billions will go toward helping homeowners facing foreclosure. Several Democrats said his commitments, to be made in writing, would be enough to prevent an embarrassing pre-inauguration drubbing for the president-elect when the Senate votes this week.

"This will be the first vote that President-elect Obama is asking us for. I'll be shocked and I'll be really disappointed if he doesn't get it," said Sen. Joseph Lieberman, an independent Democrat from Connecticut.

"This is a new beginning."

Behind closed doors, Obama also urged lawmakers to act quickly on the massive economic stimulus measure that his aides have been negotiating with congressional officials. The legislation will blend federal spending with tax cuts, and could reach $1 trillion in size, a measure of the nation's economic woes.

Democratic leaders in the House and Senate hope to have the legislation ready for his signature by mid-February, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid arranged a late-afternoon meeting to review progress.

For Obama, attendance at the Democrats' weekly closed-door lunch was a homecoming of sorts, a return to the Capitol where he arrived as a newly elected senator only four years ago.

Sen. Carl Levin said the session had a sentimental tone at times, despite the magnitude of the nation's economic woes and the challenge Obama and fellow Democrats confront.

"It's kind of hard not to call him, 'Barack.' So he said, 'Call me Barack for the next couple of days,'" Levin said with a smile
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