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Clinton Urges Prompt Action on Welfare Reform

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<i> From Associated Press</i>

President Clinton appealed to Congress to “go the final mile” Saturday by burying differences on welfare reform quickly to keep it from being engulfed by election-year politics.

But his call for reaching “common ground and higher ground” was laced with sharp partisan attacks on Republicans, including indirect but clear swipes at Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole (R-Kan.) and House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.).

“This is a time to deliver for the American people, not to pander to extremists,” he said in his weekly radio address.

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“We can’t let welfare reform die at the hands of ideological extremism or presidential politics or budget politics.”

Republicans also used their weekly radio rebuttal to focus on the welfare debate now raging in the Senate.

Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, delivering the GOP response, asserted that “the Congress and the President simply cannot wait any longer to reform the failed welfare system.”

He said the current system “has consigned millions of lower-income and disadvantaged Americans to a life that begins and ends on a dead-end street of irresponsibility, poverty and dependency.”

The Senate is in the process of considering a welfare overhaul measure and several key votes are expected this week. Senate Republicans are deeply divided over terms of the final legislation, and no particular version appears to have majority support.

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