Vice President Mike Pence is running between the White House and the Capitol in a new effort to pass some form of Obamacare repeal before the Easter recess, which kicks off Friday.

On Tuesday night, Pence again met with the House Freedom Caucus, as well as with other GOP groups. Pence reportedly briefed the House Republicans on changes to the GOP repeal bill.

“They say, ‘What can you put in here to get you to yes?'” said Brat. “Very simple answer: Free markets.”

And once again, it’s a nail-biter. One top Capitol Hill staffer told LifeZette it’s down to the nitty-gritty details, and lots of behind-the-scenes action is moving the health-care debate quickly — possibly to the House floor for a vote within days.

It’s a sign that both the White House and the Republican majority in the House of Representatives want a deal on the repeal of the Affordable Care Act before they head off to a two-week break to face voters at home.

And this time the voters who are angry over health care won’t be Democrats. This time, they could be Republicans, bitter about the GOP’s failure to pass their first attempt to repeal Obamacare after seven long years of promises.

Part of the motivation for the House Republicans is to be able to go home with an accomplishment. Reportedly, Republican donors and grassroots supporters are not happy that House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) had to pull his repeal bill, known as the American Health Care Act, on March 24. No vote was taken on that, of course.

But not all the ire is aimed at Ryan’s leadership. Some of the anger is focused on the House Freedom Caucus, a group of about 35 conservative House Republicans who thought the bill was simply a new entitlement.

The House Freedom Caucus, led by Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), has some of the biggest critics of Obamacare, but ironically the group kept it alive when they killed Ryan’s bill.

Related: How Trump Could Gut Obamacare Without Congress

But members of the House Freedom Caucus say they are not worried about going home if a second attempt fails.

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“[Constituents] are going to want us to do it right,” said Rep. Ron DeSantis (R-Fla.), speaking to LifeZette late Tuesday afternoon. “Because ultimately the policy is what is going to be important.”

Still, compromise is in the air.

Rep. Dave Brat (R-Va.) told LifeZette he would accept a bill that gives the Freedom Caucus 80 percent of what they want.

But a sticking point is premiums, said Brat. Prices have to go down, and the free market has to be part of health care reforms, Brat said.

“They say, ‘What can you put in here to get you to yes?'” said Brat. “Very simple answer: Free markets.”

That philosophy is key to a tactic used by the White House: to woo Freedom Caucus conservatives with their godfather from the Senate: Rand Paul. The Republican senator from Kentucky played golf with Trump and spent more than seven hours with him on Sunday.

Paul was a biting critic of the American Health Care Act, calling it “Obamacare Lite.” But Paul and Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) reportedly met with Reince Priebus, White House chief of staff, on March 27 to hammer out their differences.

At the heart of Paul and Lee’s concerns was an item Paul addressed at a Capitol Hill rally on March 15: the ability of small groups and individuals to join policy associations — like pools or co-ops — to gain greater leverage over health insurers and bring down insurance premiums.

Paul now says he is “optimistic” on a new repeal effort. Meanwhile, the White House is trying to expand the GOP tent.

Pence met with the House Freedom Caucus again Tuesday night, but this time, other GOP factions showed up. One was the Tuesday Group, a collection of moderate conservatives. Another group is the Republican Study Committee, a conservative faction that Pence once led when he was in the House.

Republicans were mum when leaving the meeting at about 10:30 p.m. Tuesday, according to reports. A Wednesday meeting was promised that would address “Title I” aspects of Obamacare, such as allowing children to be insured until age 26.

If the repeal bill is revived, it can go to the floor with amendments made by “managers,” or legislative leaders. Even so, a bill — if passed — won’t be the final version. The Senate has yet to weigh in.