President Barack Obama warned of an economic"catastrophe" if US lawmakers were unable to pass an unprecedented economic stimulus package and slammed Republicans for failing to recognize the outcome of the country's general election last year, according to DPA. "A failure to act, and act now, will turn crisis into a catastrophe and guarantee a longer recession," Obama warned today at the White House. Obama, who made bipartisanship a central plank of his presidential campaign, has made a public push for Republican support for a more than 800-billion-dollar recovery package - the cornerstone of Obama's efforts to revive the world's largest economy. The US has been in recession since December 2007 and lost 2.6 million jobs in 2008. Obama has warned that recovery will take years even with a massive injection of government cash. But opposition Republicans have said the stimulus plan includes too much wasteful spending and refused to back the legislation. The bill was approved by the House of Representatives in a party-line vote last week, but Democratic leaders on Tuesday warned they may not have enough votes to get the bill through the US Senate. Obama broke from his bipartisan message today, criticizing Republicans for aspiring to debunked economic theories that tax cuts alone will revive the US economy. "I reject that theory, and so did the American people when they went to the polls in November and voted resoundingly for change," Obama said.