- Associated Press - Monday, March 26, 2012

Demonstrators chanting dueling slogans, singers, doctors in white coats, even a presidential candidate and a brass quartet joined hundreds of people sounding off Monday on the broad sidewalk in front of the Supreme Court as the justices considered President Obama’s health care law.

As the justices listened to legal arguments, demonstrators said it was important their messages be heard, too.

By the time arguments began indoors, the sidewalk in front of the court was filled. More than 100 supporters of the health care law walked in a circle, chanting slogans like “1, 2, 3, 4, health care is what we’re fighting for” and “Care for you. Care for me. Care for every family.” One supporter walked with a cane, and another drove a motorized scooter. They were joined by a four-piece band of students from Howard University playing New Orleans-style jazz riffs on trumpets and a trombone.

A much smaller group of detractors had their own signs, including, “Mr. Obama tear down this bill.” To supporters’ chants of “We love Obamacare” the opponents who think the law is unconstitutional answered with, “We love the Constitution.”

Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum held a brief news conference outside the court after the arguments concluded. He vowed to fight for repeal of the health care law if elected and knocked rival Mitt Romney for putting in place a similar health care law as governor of Massachusetts.

At least two heated sidewalk discussions broke out between the law’s opponents and supporters, one of them a parent whose son had a kidney transplant and another whose wife has a health care business. Still, the demonstrations remained peaceful.

Early in the day, about two dozen doctors stood in front of the court for a news conference, with speakers describing how their patients would be helped if the high court upholds the law, meant to bring insurance coverage to almost every American.

“This is not about politics. It’s about people,” said Dr. Alice Chen of Los Angeles, executive director of Doctors for America, a group supporting the law.

Robert Kennedy, a resident in internal medicine at New York’s Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx, described treating the uninsured, many of whom wait to come to the hospital until they are very sick. Mr. Kennedy, 29, said one uninsured man worried about the cost of care delayed going to the hospital for pneumonia until it became difficult for him to breathe.

Many opponents of the new law, meanwhile, wore American flag bandanas and called for the court to strike down the law. Keli Carender, 32, of Seattle, wore an American flag bandanna around her wrist and another stuck in her pants pocket.

Another demonstrator against the law, Diana Reimer of Lansdale, Pa., said her main issue is with the individual mandate.

“If the government can tell us we have to buy this, what else can they tell you to do?” said Ms. Reimer, 69, who was wearing silver tea-bag earrings to show her affiliation with a tea-party group.

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