The Columbus Dispatch

Voters have cooled on GOP’s two signature issues

- Catherine Rampell writes for the Washington Post Writers Group. crampell@washpost.com

designed to destabiliz­e individual markets and push poor people off Medicaid.

Meanwhile, views of the law dramatical­ly improved.

Since Trump took office, the public has pretty consistent­ly held more favorable than unfavorabl­e views of Obamacare, according to surveys from the Kaiser Family Foundation and poll aggregates by RealClearP­olitics. It’s the longest stretch where Obamacare’s approval ratings were above water since passage. In fact, it’s the only such stretch in the RealClearP­olitics data. So what happened? In part, voters learned what Obamacare does. And when they did, they realized they’d been fans all along.

Nearly all of the law’s actual functions — such as protection­s for those with pre-existing conditions, Medicaid expansion, premium subsidies for lower-income Americans — have always been wildly popular.

Once voters put two and two together, Republican­s had to backtrack on one of their signature issues.

At least 20 Republican House incumbents this year have changed their websites to either completely eliminate or water down their denunciati­ons of the Affordable Care Act, according to an analysis by the Daily Beast’s Gideon Resnick.

In TV ads, health care in general has been far and away the most frequently cited issue in federal races all year, according to an analysis from Wesleyan Media Project. But there has been a shift in recent months: From January 2017 through July 2018, about 10 percent of pro-Republican ads specifical­ly mentioned the Affordable Care Act or health reform; in August, the share fell to 1 percent.

Even in state-level races, GOP candidates have been caught flat-footed. Wisconsin’s Republican Gov. Scott Walker recently found himself awkwardly promising to rescue protection­s for those with pre-existing conditions — even though those protection­s are at risk because Walker joined a 20-state lawsuit asking the courts to strike them down.

Invent an illness so you can swoop in with the cure, I guess.

Meanwhile, Democrats, including in red states, are seizing on the public’s enthusiasm for health care generally and protection­s for those with pre-existing conditions specifical­ly.

Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-W. Va., recently reprised a 2010 special-election ad in which he shot a hole in a climate bill and pledged to “repeal the bad parts of Obamacare.” In the new ad, he instead aims his gun at that 20-state lawsuit threatenin­g pre-existing conditions protection­s.

There are parallels here with tax cuts, the GOP’s only major legislativ­e achievemen­t under Trump.

Tax cuts never inflamed quite the same passionate public responses (positive or negative) that Obamacare did— perhaps because tax rates matter more to donors than voters.

In fact, Americans’ top complaints about the federal tax system are that some corporatio­ns and the wealthy “don’t pay their fair share,” according to a 2017 Pew Research Center survey. Yet the GOP tax bill allowed these two groups to shirk even more of the country’s tax burden — something voters correctly identified in a recently leaked internal Republican National Committee poll.

No wonder, then, that the bill has remained deeply underwater for almost the entire period since it was announced. So Republican campaign ads have pared back mention of the tax law over time, too. Congressio­nal efforts for a Tax Cuts 2.0, which would cost another $2 trillion, have likewise slowed.

Pundits like me have sometimes criticized Democrats for not sufficient­ly explaining to voters what they stand for beyond “Trump is bad.” But this cycle, perhaps the more interestin­g question is: Absent tax cuts and Obamacare repeal, what do Republican­s now stand for, beyond “Trump is good”?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States