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			<byline>By Rich Daly</byline>			<abstract>				<p>Congressional leaders indicated that long-standing partisan positions on future healthcare policy changes have hardened in the aftermath of a &#8220;status quo&#8221; election.</p>			</abstract>		</body.head>		<body.content>			<block>				
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</media>			</block>						<block><![CDATA[<p>Congressional leaders indicated Sunday that long-standing partisan positions on future healthcare policy changes have hardened in the aftermath of a "status quo" election.</p><p>Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.), a member of the "Gang of Six" group of bipartisan senators that offered a federal deficit reduction deal during last year's debt ceiling debate, said on ABC News' "This Week" that any debt-reduction deal expected in the coming weeks or months will need to include changes to Medicare and Medicaid.</p>]]></block><block><![CDATA[<p>""Entitlements are choking us and we have to make the right kind of reforms to do it right and make sure we protect these programs," Chambliss said.</p><p>Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), a member of the Budget Committee and co-chair of the 2011 supercommittee on deficit reduction, argued against any debt deal increasing co-payments for Medicare beneficiaries.</p><p>"All of the revenue falling on the middle class is not a fair and balanced way to get to a deal," she said on the same program.</p><p>Meanwhile, House Republicans may continue their efforts to overturn all or portions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, according to a senior House Republican.</p><p>Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.) said on "Fox News Sunday" that President Barack Obama's re-election would not end Republican efforts to repeal the healthcare law.</p><p>"I can tell you, as a physician, we're not opposed to the president's healthcare law because of this election," he said. "We're opposed because it's bad policy and it's bad for patients all across this land."</p><p>Price's comments may reflect some division among House Republicans coming after Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) appeared resigned to the law when he said last week that "Obamacare is the law of the land."</p>]]></block>			</body.content>		<body.end>			<tagline typ="std" />		</body.end>	</body></nitf>