By Ceci Connolly,Washington Post

Obama is having problems on Capitol Hill
President Obama’s hopes for quick action on comprehensive health-care reform ran headlong this week into the realities of Congress,as lawmakers searching for the money to pay for a broad expansion of coverage discovered that it wasn’t easy to find and descended into partisan —and intraparty —bickering.
A set of unexpectedly high cost estimates —arcane data that nevertheless carry enormous import in the legislative process —sent shockwaves along Pennsylvania Avenue and forced one key committee to delay action on its bill,probably until after the July 4 recess.
In a high-level meeting at the White House yesterday,Obama conveyed his concern over early pronouncements by the Congressional Budget Office that a bill drafted by the Senate health committee would cover just 16 million additional people at a cost of $1 trillion,said one official with knowledge of the session who was not permitted to talk to reporters and so spoke on the condition of anonymity.
“That is not his idea of good,affordable,universal coverage,”said this adviser. The preliminary estimate,pounced on by Republicans,“has rattled everyone.”
House Democratic leaders,meanwhile,said they will wait until next month to unveil plans for financing their bill.