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President Barack Obama gives a Labor Day speech  in Cin cinnati.
President Barack Obama gives a Labor Day speech in Cin cinnati.
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CINCINNATI — In a combative Labor Day speech, President Barack Obama said the health care debate had gone on too long and accused opponents of spreading “lies” meant to convince Americans that his proposed overhaul would cruelly deny care to the elderly.

The president, speaking at an AFL-CIO picnic, said that “special interests” were determined to “scare the heck out of people.”

“I’ve got a question for all these folks who say, you know, we’re going to pull the plug on Grandma and this is all about illegal immigrants — you’ve heard all the lies,” Obama said. “I’ve got a question for all those folks: What are you going to do? What’s your answer? What’s your solution?

“And you know what? They don’t have one.”

The president seemed eager to recapture some of the enthusiasm that propelled him during his campaign. A prolonged recession has sapped morale, he said, as have pundits who warn that “this isn’t working, and that’s not working.”

In the face of a collective “funk,” Obama reprised a story from the 2008 campaign about a South Carolina official who electrified one of his appearances through a chant: “Fired up; ready to go!”

The story was not part of his prepared speech, and the White House later said Obama launched into it spontaneously. If nothing else, the chant buoyed his aides, who whooped and shouted.

Dressed in shirt-sleeves, the president also gave a preview of what he plans to tell the nation Wednesday in a speech to a joint session of Congress. He wants to curb rising insurance premiums, bar insurance companies from denying coverage to sick people and create a new marketplace that would offer reasonably priced coverage.

With about 20,000 people listening in and outside the pavilion, Obama said: “Every debate at some point comes to an end. At some point, it’s time to decide. At some point, it’s time to act. Ohio, it’s time to act and get this thing done.”

Obama’s appearance before the union crowd was a delicate one. In a number of ways, the White House has signaled willingness to compromise on the “public option” — a government-run program that would compete with private insurers — rather than let a health care bill that includes such a plan collapse.

But labor officials have made clear that they don’t want the president to bargain away the public option. Last week, AFL-CIO Secretary- Treasurer Richard Trumka said the union would not back a health care bill without the public option.

The union president, John Sweeney, appeared on stage before Obama’s arrival and called for a “proud public option to bring down costs and keep the insurance companies honest.”

Another guest speaker pressed that point. Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, told the crowd that Congress would pass a health care bill “with a strong public option.”

But in his speech, Obama did little to clarify matters. He reiterated that he favors a public option while stopping short of an unequivocal statement he would veto any health care bill that lacks one.

“I continue to believe that a public option within the basket of insurance choices would help improve quality and bring down costs,” he said.

That was enough to satisfy some union leaders.

Trumka said in an interview afterward: “I take him at face value. He said he was going to fight for the public option. We’re excited about that, and we’re going to help him.”

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