Obama, Corker clash in private meeting

Lead GOP negotiator on Wall Street bill conflicts with the president on claims of party bipartisanship

Published May 25, 2010 7:05PM (EDT)

Republican officials say President Barack Obama and Sen. Bob Corker clashed during a private meeting over whether anyone in either party was really trying to be bipartisan this election year.

Four officials present at the rare session said that when Obama appealed for bipartisanship, Corker accused him of "audacity" given the administration's handling of the financial reform package and other legislation. Corker was a lead GOP negotiator on the bill to regulate Wall Street.

The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the private session, said Obama bristled and defended his negotiations over the bill.

Applause could be heard as Obama exited the room. Obama described the lunch-hour session as a frank discussion on a range of issues.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama and Senate Republicans called a high-noon cease-fire in their long-running political feud Tuesday, holding a rare, private meeting on Capitol Hill to discuss what legislation can be achieved during this volatile election year.

"We want to see if we can get some more work done," Obama told reporters on the way into the session.

The question went unanswered, according to early readouts from those in the room. Obama gave opening remarks before a question-and-answer session; one official said senators fussed at the president a bit. Applause could be heard emanating from the parlor just before the president exited, however.

"It was a good, frank discussion about a whole range of issues," Obama reported as he left.

The prospects for progress weren't high. Relations between Republicans and Democrats are extraordinarily strained, a reflection of constituencies inflamed by the struggling economy and the government's role in transcendant problems facing the nation. Jobs, immigration, the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and the federal budget all were topics of discussion.

But tension -- political and increasingly personal -- underpinned the unusual event six months from a midterm election in which every member of the House, 36 Senate seats and Obama's credibility are on the line.

The two sides have cooperated on few items this year. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell has urged Republicans to vote against the Democrats' agenda items as often as possible in attempt to moderate them and draw distinctions between the parties.

The rare Hill meeting between the Democratic president and Republicans who have objected to much of his agenda came at Obama's urging, according to Republicans with knowledge of the matter.

An official who attended the meeting said Obama did not say whether he will deploy the National Guard to the border, as has been urged by Arizona Republican Sens. John McCain and Jon Kyl.

Republicans also said they expected to speak with Obama about their plan to attach immigration reforms to an almost $60 billion war spending bill. The amendments would toughen border security by deploying drones and thousands of National Guard troops, if Obama doesn't deploy them first.

During his presidential campaign, Obama promised to push legislation paving the way to citizenship for some 11 million illegal immigrants. He has said more recently, though, that Congress has little appetite for a massive bill on the subject this election year, so lawmakers are looking at ways to enact more incremental changes.


By Laurie Kellman

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Barack Obama Bob Corker