WASHINGTON - With the finish line in sight on the long national health care debate, Rep. Jim Oberstar, a Democrat who opposes abortion, announced that he will not stand in the way of a final bill, meaning that all of the pieces have fallen into place for the Minnesota delegation.
The timing of Oberstar's decision, which surprised even some aides, comes as Democratic leaders scramble to muster every last vote in a do-or-die showdown on landmark health care legislation extending coverage to 30 million more Americans.
In what could be a crucial week for the Obama presidency, federal funding for abortion has become a major stumbling block.
For weeks the Iron Range Democrat had been signaling that he wanted to support the legislation, but wasn't sure he could without stronger language barring public funding for abortion.
Until this past weekend, Oberstar was considered the last holdout from Minnesota in a congressional vote-counting operation that has Democrats cautiously optimistic about their chances of sending the bill to Obama by week's end.
As of Monday, the Minnesota delegation appeared to split largely along party lines. Only one lawmaker, rural Democrat Collin Peterson, is expected to cross party lines and join a unanimous Republican opposition.
Peterson was the only Minnesota Democrat to vote against the House version of the bill in November. It passed with only two votes to spare. Though Peterson said he sees improvement in the Senate version, he remains skeptical. "I can't see that it's changed things much," Peterson said in a recent interview. "We're not doing anything serious about holding costs down."
Oberstar, 75, voted for the House bill, but only after special language was added ensuring that federal funding could not be used for health plans that cover abortion. That provision, championed by Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., has become the central fault line in the final debate.