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More cracks in GOP resistance to Obamacare

POSTED BY: NIKI2
UPDATED: Monday, January 27, 2014 12:57
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Monday, January 27, 2014 9:30 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

There are increasing signs that the GOP’s total war opposition to Obamacare is becoming tougher to sustain. The basic organizing principle – that only maximum resistance is acceptable in the face of such an existential threat to American freedom – is still widely dominant. But there are scattered indications it’s giving way to an implicit acknowledgment that the law’s fundamental goal — expanding health coverage and security to those who lack it, through more federal oversight and spending – has some moral validity.

Late yesterday, Utah governor Gary Herbert announced ( http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/news/57438301-78/medicaid-expansion-healt
h-federal.html.csp
) that the state will expand Medicaid to cover more of the uninsured. There are two possible mechanisms to do this, but both would spend more federal money to expand coverage to tends of thousands. His quote was telling: “Doing nothing…I’ve taken off the table. Doing nothing is not an option.” He added that it is “not fair” to allow some 60,000 Utah residents to fall into the “Medicaid gap.”

Doing nothing in the face of Obamacare’s offer of cash for states to cover their uninsured is precisely the response foes prefer — partly because such coverage will be so hard to take away. Several other GOP-controlled states are also looking for their own ways to opt in to the Medicaid expansion — which is to say, to accept federal money to expand coverage while achieving nominal distance from Obamacare.

Meanwhile, the GOP Senate candidate in West Virginia, Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, now has this to say about the Medicaid expansion: “coverage is great and having more people covered is excellent.” ( http://www.nationaljournal.com/politics/shelley-moore-capito-doesn-t-w
orry-much-about-the-tea-party-20140123
) In West Virginia, some 75,000 people have enrolled ( http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/21/health/peace-of-mind-is-first-benefi
t-for-many-now-getting-medicaid.html?hpw&rref=us&_r=0
). Even in red states, gung-ho repeal advocates such as Capito feel the need to reconcile themselves to expanded coverage as a positive development.

(In Kentucky, another red state where coverage is expanding, Mitch McConnell has struggled ( http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20131112/NEWS01/311120047/McCon
nell-continues-attack-Obamacare
) to respond when asked directly about people benefitting, and he’s rolled out new ads ( http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2014/01/22/morning-pl
um-mitch-mcconnell-and-the-moral-argument-over-obamacare
/) touting work bringing more health care to sick people — implicitly ceding some ground to the moral argument for health reform.)

All of this comes as House Republicans are essentially admitting in internal discussions that there will be no serious Obamacare showdown in the next debt ceiling fight. And a new CBS News poll finds that while 50 percent disapprove of the law, the absolutist position is a minority one:
Quote:

Which comes closest to your view about the 2010 health care law?

-- The law is working well and should be kept in place as is: 6

-- There are some good things in the law, but some changes are needed to make it work better: 56

-- The law has so much wrong with it that it needs to be repealed entirely: 34 ( http://www.cbsnews.com/news/poll-americans-split-on-obama-approval/)



A solid majority thinks there are good things in the law, even if it needs changes, while barely more than a third supports the idea that it’s a disaster that must be eliminated entirely. The latter is driven almost entirely by Republicans. Among them, 69 percent support repeal, while independents tilt in favor of keeping it by 65-35.

That last finding is probably why many Republicans will maintain a total war posture against the law, at odds with majorities. Many GOP governors will keep holding out against the expansion ( http://www.commonwealthfund.org/Maps-and-Data/Medicaid-Expansion-Map.a
spx
), leaving millions uninsured ( http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2013/12/17/the-mornin
g-plum-the-consequences-of-gop-opposition-to-obamacare
/). It’s certainly possible more problems later will galvanize resistance. The law’s long term prospects still remain up in the air. But for now, as enrollment mounts, cracks in the resistance are increasingly visible. http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2014/01/24/the-mornin
g-plum-more-cracks-in-gop-resistance-to-obamacare
/


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Monday, January 27, 2014 12:57 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Quote:

GOP Candidates Suddenly Find Love For Obamacare's Medicaid Expansion

The conventional wisdom is that Republicans running in 2014 will be campaigning against Obamacare, attempting to recreate the 2010 magic that saw them make massive gains in Congress and state governments, holding themselves in stark contract to Democrats who are responsible for what the GOP sees as a fatally flawed law.

That's the narrative, and that's what Republican strategists would have you believe. But comments -- or the lack thereof -- from some GOP candidates in state and national elections suggest that opposition might not be as ironclad as previously believed, as the Washington Post's Greg Sargent has documented ( http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2014/01/24/the-mornin
g-plum-more-cracks-in-gop-resistance-to-obamacare
/). In at least one case, in fact, a Republican in one of the most competitive Senate races in the country effectively endorsed the expansion.

It's a huge shift from the "defund or repeal" mantra during the government shutdown of October, a possible indicator that some conservatives are recognizing that Obamacare is here to stay -- and that proposing to knock the newly enrolled off Medicaid is politically perilous.

In an interview with National Journal ( http://www.nationaljournal.com/politics/shelley-moore-capito-doesn-t-w
orry-much-about-the-tea-party-20140123
) last week, Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, expected to be effectively unopposed for the Republican nomination for the open U.S. Senate seat in West Virginia, had some of the kindest words yet for one of Obamacare's key provisions from a GOP candidate.

"Coverage is great and having more people covered is excellent," Capito said of the expansion. She included a number of caveats -- she's concerned about long-term costs -- but she simultaneously acknowledged that repealing Obamacare is likely an unachievable goal and that aiming to improve the health care reform law while keeping people insured is a preferable pursuit.

"Hopefully, when I get to the Senate and we begin to make changes in the Affordable Care Act, that we will be able to find a way through tax credits and subsidies to keep folks in that insured area," she said. "And then, as they move up and we grow the economy -- because of better policies we're putting forward -- once they move up they're able to move out of that category, maybe in a more gradual fashion than one day you're on, one day you're off."

Capito's borderline heresy likely has a very pragmatic source: Medicaid expansion is a pretty good deal for her state. With the federal government covering all of the expansion costs for the first three years and 90 percent thereafter, the Kaiser Family Foundation projects that 116,000 West Virginians would be covered by the expansion by 2022 ( http://kaiserfamilyfoundation.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/8384.pdf).

In a state with 268,600 uninsured residents, according to Kaiser ( http://kff.org/other/state-indicator/total-population/), that's a significant breakthrough. Capito seems to have calculated that, although the race leans in her favor, according to the Cook Political Report ( http://cookpolitical.com/senate/maps), she can't be seen as proposing to strip newly obtained health coverage from her low-income constituents. The top Democrat in the race also staked out support for Medicaid expansion in a statement ( http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2014/01/21/a-good-que
stion-for-republicans-about-the-affordable-care-act
/).

Capito is the most high-profile national GOP candidate to break from the party line, but a deafening silence has also been noted from Republican gubernatorial candidates. They're equally important, as Medicaid expansion decisions are made at the state level and, if elected, Republican governors would theoretically have the opportunity to roll back the expansion.

But they aren't vocally advocating for that, according to an analysis from Bloomberg View's Jonathan Bernstein ( http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-01-23/will-obamacare-s-medicaid-exp
ansion-continue-.html
). He checked out the campaign websites for GOP candidates in six Medicaid-expanding states where Republicans are judged to have a good shot at retaking the governor's houses.

None of them seems to be making the elimination of Medicaid expansion a pillar of their campaign. It instead goes entirely unmentioned.

"For what it’s worth, early evidence supports the liberal optimist (and conservative pessimist) view: that where it’s in place, Medicaid expansion is here to stay," Bernstein wrote.

Don't expect every Republican to tack to the center this way. A Republican candidate for the open Iowa U.S. Senate seat has touted her vote against that state's Medicaid expansion plan ( http://www.joniforiowa.com/press-releases/jonis-best-hits-2013/). But others are lightening their tone -- the top Republican candidate for the Michigan Senate spot said in November that she was "past" defund and repeal, flipping to a "fix it" position similar to the one outlined by Capito in her interview last week ( http://www.buzzfeed.com/jamesarkin/michigan-senate-candidate-switches-
stance-on-obamacare-repea
).

It's not a wholesale conversion. But it's major movement given conservatives' unyielding anti-Obamacare doctrine of the last few years. http://talkingpointsmemo.com/dc/2014-gop-candidates-medicaid-expansion



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