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President Trump says he'd bargain with Dems on health care

President Donald Trump says his health care reform fell short because it lacked support from Democrats.

Trump made his first comments about the failure of a signature legislative item Friday in the Oval Office a short time after a House vote on the bill was cancelled.

Trump told reporters "we were very close" and tried to blame Democrats, though Republicans control both the House and the Senate.

Trump says he would be willing to reopen negotiations for a health care bill with Democrats if the Affordable Care Act fails.

Trump told reporters Friday that he would be "open to it" if Democrats wanted to work on a bipartisan measure. He predicted the current law would soon collapse.

The president says he has a great relationship with the Republican Party and isn't going to speak badly about GOP lawmakers.

Still, he said he was a little surprised by the bill's rejection from the conservatives in the House Freedom Caucus.

Trump also said he "never said repeal and replace it within 64 days," though he repeatedly promised during the campaign to do it on Day One of his term.

"We came really close today, but we came up short'," House Speaker Paul Ryan said.

The president has “left everything on the field when it comes to this bill,” White House press secretary Sean Spicer said Friday at an afternoon press briefing, adding that Ryan "has done everything he can” to collect votes but “at the end of the day, you can’t force people to vote.”

ABC and The Associated Press contributed to this report.