Despite mis-starts and and a poor roll out, more Americans are enrolling under the Affordable Health Care Act and expansion of Medicaid is proceeding in many states. Nonetheless, the GOP remains obsessed with trashing the law even as it offers no viable alternative to it. All one hears is about repealing Obamacare and the default position is throwing millions of Americans - many of whom the GOP seems to believe are minorities, and thus disposable - back into the ranks of the uninsured. A column in
The Hill suggests that the GOP obsession may come back to bite the GOP in the ass. Here are column highlights:
Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), chairman of the Republican Senatorial
Committee, is sure he has the best political strategy for winning the
six seats the GOP needs to capture control of the Senate in November —
attack Democrats for the Affordable Care Act.
The Republican National Committee’s first major advertising buy of this
midterm election season will come in the shape of attack ads in 12
states against incumbent Democrats who voted for ObamaCare.
Conservative activists are following the same strategy. The New York Times
reported last week that the billionaire Koch brothers have already
helped to air $20 million in advertising against Democrats who supported
healthcare reform.
Oh, what a waste of money. As President
Obama joked about casino mogul Sheldon Adelson, who spent millions
trying to defeat him in the 2012 election: “You could have bought an
island and named it Nobama for that kind of money.”
Instead, the GOP is labeling itself “The Party of No.”
“The Republican Party makes a huge mistake by defining itself by what
it’s against and not what it’s for,” David Axelrod, President Obama’s
former top political advisor, told me. “If they go into the midterms
counting on opposition to ObamaCare as their reason for being they will
only exacerbate the image that has driven their numbers down.”
Ed Rogers, the longtime Republican fundraiser and strategist, wrote in The Washington Post last week that Democrats are trying to fake out the GOP by urging them to stop talking about problems with Obamacare. “Republicans need to stick to the script,” Rogers wrote, “and much of
that script centers on Obama, ObamaCare and the Obama economy. Period.
But note that Rogers is careful to add a focus on the economy to his
prescription for a winning GOP strategy for the midterms elections.
So
far, however, the money and the messages from Republicans are all
focused on ObamaCare. The GOP attack advertisements remind voters that
ObamaCare led the President to utter 2013’s lie of the year, as
determined by PolitiFact — that Americans could keep their existing
healthcare plan under Obamacare. The scripts also frequently mention
cancelled plans, higher premiums, and people losing their favorite
doctors. Republicans in Congress are locked on the same political message.
A hardball political analysis suggests the GOP is lost in the weeds. A
January Quinnipiac poll found 39 percent of voters think the “most
important priority” for the 2014 is the economy. The second biggest
concern, at 23 percent, is the federal budget deficit. And in third
place, at 16 percent, is health care.
It is important to factor into that polling such as a CNN/ORC poll in
December, which found 15 percent of Americans who tell pollsters their
perceptions of ObamaCare are negative because it is “not liberal
enough.”
According to the Census, nearly 48 million Americans had
no health insurance in 2012. Another 40 million are estimated to have
inadequate health insurance that left them without coverage at some time
during the year or had costs so high as to threaten their finances.
People want solutions. Meanwhile the non-stop attacks, absent any
better plan — make that any realistic plan at all from Republicans— for
how to fix the nation’s costly healthcare system is steadily becoming
political wallpaper.
Despite all the current negativity around ObamaCare, the real news is
that more than 2 million have now signed up for the state and federal
exchanges. Another 4 million have benefited from Medicare expansion. Millions
more have gained improved policies that cover preventative care,
pre-existing medical conditions, eliminate caps on insurance spending
and allow young people to stay on their parents’ insurance plan until
they are 26.
Last week, Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) said he expects Republicans
to come up with a healthcare plan later this year to replace Obamacare. My advice: Check with Mitt Romney.
1 comment:
"Last week, Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) said he expects Republicans to come up with a healthcare plan later this year to replace Obamacare. My advice: Check with Mitt Romney."
Of course that's what the Republicans have been saying since 2009. I think it will come as a giant package, along with the Republican jobs bill, and the Republican plan for tax reform.
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