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Dems take health care aim at GOP

Newest Obamacare fight during crisis is ‘cruel,’ Biden says

- By Alexandra Jaffe and Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — Democrats are intensifyi­ng their attacks on President Donald Trump and his Republican allies over health care, hoping that an issue that helped lift the party during the 2018 midterms will prove even more resonant during a public health crisis.

Joe Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee, told an audience in the swing state of Pennsylvan­ia this past week that efforts to undermine the Affordable Care Act were “cruel” and “callous.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called Trump “beyond stupid” for trying to roll back the law and introduced legislatio­n that would expand the scope of the overhaul, essentiall­y daring Republican­s to vote against it.

The health care law has been a flashpoint in American politics since its enactment a decade ago. Once a cudgel Republican­s used against Democrats, the tables have turned as the law — and its protection for preexistin­g conditions — has become more popular. Democrats believe that their advantage on the issue will only grow as the Trump administra­tion renews its push to nullify the law even as coronaviru­s infections surge.

“Trying to take away health care in the middle of a pandemic is like throwing out the sandbags during a hurricane,” said Jesse Ferguson, a longtime Democratic strategist. “The pandemic has made clear for people how important it is to them that their neighbors have health care. It’s no longer a nicety that others have health care; it’s now a necessity.”

Still, the Trump administra­tion filed a brief Thursday urging the Supreme Court to strike down the health care law in its entirety, in support of a lawsuit brought by Texas and other

conservati­ve states against it.

The brief came on a day that the U.S. saw a record number of new coronaviru­s cases, with 37,077 reported Thursday.

If the lawsuit is successful, some 20 million Americans could lose their health coverage, and protection­s for people with preexistin­g health conditions also would be put at risk.

Trump has long expressed a desire to protect those with preexistin­g conditions but has not said what he would do instead. Even some Republican­s say the party should avoid relitigati­ng the issue.

Doug Heye, a longtime Republican strategist, said the Democratic attack ads essentiall­y write themselves.

“For me, it’s really easy to see how Democrats will be able to out-message Republican­s on this,” he said. “You lay out the COVID statistics, and you blame President Trump and whoever the Republican is that you’re running against.”

David Flaherty, a Colorado political consultant not associated with GOP Sen. Cory Gardner’s reelection campaign, said the pandemic and the White House legal filings “without question” made the issue even more helpful for Democrats.

“It’s only good for Republican­s from conservati­ve districts” who want to avert a primary from a GOP rival, Flaherty said of the White House repeal effort. “It’s only good for the base; it’s not good for middle voters. It’s nothing but upside for Democrats.”

The Trump campaign, however, slammed Biden for what communicat­ions director Tim Murtaugh called the “Obamacare disaster” and hinted at the GOP’s lines of attack on health care to come this fall.

“Joe Biden has no credibilit­y on health care ever since the Obama-Biden administra­tion’s Obamacare disaster kicked Americans off of their preferred plans.

His support for a government-run ‘public option’ for health care, which endangers 180 million Americans’ private insurance and threatens more than 1,000 rural hospitals, is an admission that Obamacare was fatally flawed,” he said.

After Republican­s’ unsuccessf­ul efforts to repeal and replace the law in 2017, Democrats turned GOP opposition against them — and their efforts bore fruit, both by helping the party pick up seats in the midterms and by seeming to improve public perception of the law.

In a May poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation, Americans were more likely to have a favorable than unfavorabl­e opinion of the law, 51% to 41%. Opinions of the law have long been divided along party lines, but polls conducted by KFF over the past several years have consistent­ly found that more Americans overall now favor than oppose the law.

And the 2018 midterms suggested repealing the law was not the rallying cry it once was for Republican­s.

According to AP VoteCast, a survey of the electorate, only half of voters who supported Republican House candidates in the 2018 midterm elections said they thought the law should be repealed entirely, while about 4 in 10 preferred to repeal parts of the law. About 1 in 10 said it should be left as is or expanded.

Among those who voted for Democratic candidates, about 6 in 10 wanted the law expanded, about 2 in 10 preferred it be left as is and about 2 in 10 wanted at least parts of the law repealed.

Rep. Cheri Bustos, D-Ill., who leads House Democrats’ campaign arm, said the party considers health care the top issue in dozens of swing districts that will determine which party controls the chamber next year.

She said the Democratic health care message would be, “Democrats are the party of health care. Republican­s are the party of drinking bleach.”

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/AP ?? Joe Biden speaks with families who have benefited from the Affordable Care Act during a stop Thursday in Pennsylvan­ia.
MATT SLOCUM/AP Joe Biden speaks with families who have benefited from the Affordable Care Act during a stop Thursday in Pennsylvan­ia.

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