From the Washington Post:
Americans split evenly on the Supreme Court’s recent 5 to 4 decision upholding Obama’s health-care law, with 42 percent approving of the decision and 44 percent opposing it. But in a significant change, the legislation is now viewed less negatively than it was before the ruling. In the new survey, 47 percent support the law and 47 percent oppose it. In April, 39 percent backed it and 53 percent opposed it.
House Republicans will vote again this week on a measure to repeal the health-care law. In the poll, just one-third of all Americans favor repealing the legislationin its entirety or in part. At the same time, Thirty-eight percent of Americans consider Romney’s support for repeal a major reason to vote for him, compared with 29 percent who say it is a major reason to vote against him.
But look what happens when the Supreme Court rules in its favor: suddenly the law isn’t so bad anymore. Same with gay marriage among African-Americans: everyone was freaking out about what Obama’s declaration of support might do to his black constituency, and within days of his announcement, black support for gay marriage skyrocketed (by around 10% in some places, I believe).
This is why the Democrats are such a pathetic party: they still haven’t learned this lesson. They enacted healthcare in 2010, the Republicans screamed “death panel,” and the Democrats retreated. So of course voters hate the law: Democrats looked like they didn’t know what they were doing, and Republicans looked like they did. It was never about actual policy.
For an example of real leadership, even if the policies themselves weren’t necessarily good, Scott Walker ran for office promising to balance budgets, decided to bust the unions, withstood massive public discontent and a recall election, and held his ground and won. That’s balls. But the ballsiest Democrat is still a bigger coward than the weakest Republican (with the exception of Mitt Romney). When will this sad excuse for a party learn to actually vouch for its own ideas? It’s pathetic.
(Rant over.)
Related articles
- Supreme Court upholds health care reform law (charlotte.news14.com)
- Polls: No big SCOTUS bump for Obama (politico.com)
- Support for Health Care Reform Law Rises After Supreme Court Ruling to Uphold (themoderatevoice.com)
- CNN Smacks Republicans for Creating ‘Uncertainty’ About ObamaCare (newsbusters.org)
- Kaiser Poll: 56 Percent Want Health Care Law’s Opponents To Stop Trying to Block Law’s Implementation (themoderatevoice.com)
- Vote This Week: Stop Efforts to Repeal the Health Care Law (womensphilanthropy.typepad.com)
- Speaker Boehner: ‘Ruling underscores the urgency of repealing this harmful law in its entirety’… (speaker.gov)
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