Imperial Valley Press

Law and order vs. health care as Dems, GOP vie for suburbs

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WASHINGTON (AP) — In Republican hands for 28 years but now up for grabs, a suburban Missouri congressio­nal district hugging St. Louis has become a lab for what each party considers one of its most lethal political weapons.

TV ads by GOP Rep. Ann Wagner show protesters stomping a police car as the narrator accuses Democratic challenger Jill Schupp of support from “radical defund the police organizati­ons.” A Schupp spot says Wagner voted “against people with preexistin­g conditions during COVID.” The coronaviru­s causes COVID-19.

The pattern is similar outside Philadelph­ia, where GOP Rep. Brian Fitzpatric­k accuses Democratic challenger Christina Finelo of supporting police defunding. Finelo’s first ad says Fitzpatric­k’s backed ending coverage for people with preexistin­g conditions. Each contests the other’s charge.

Scores of suburban districts are back in play in the GOP’s long-shot attempt to win House control in November’s election. Democrats who used health care to capture the majority in 2018 are emphasizin­g it anew, saying they’ll shield voters from Republican­s trying to tear coverage away during a pandemic.

“This is as current an issue as can possibly be,” said Leslie Dach, who heads the Democratic-backed Protect Our Care Coalition.

In some races, Republican­s are talking up lawlessnes­s to try stemming defections of educated, moderate suburban voters from the GOP, spurred by aversion to President Donald Trump. But even where Republican candidates promote themes such as rebuilding the economy, Trump’s blunt-force ads and his tweets on law and order have kept it in the forefront.

“If I don’t win, America’s Suburbs will be OVERRUN with Low Income Projects, Anarchists, Agitators, Looters and, of course, `Friendly Protesters,’” he tweeted recently.

Wagner has voted for bills that would have ended the coverage that former President Barack Obama’s health care law guarantees people with preexistin­g conditions. She’s introduced bills to protect such coverage, her campaign says.

Schupp has said she opposes defunding police, a far-left call to restructur­e and even cut police agencies that many Democrats reject. She’s been backed by Indivisibl­e, a progressiv­e group that supports the proposal.

Each party says their messaging is poll- tested and will work.

Public safety and police defunding are “an increasing­ly significan­t and powerful issue” in suburbs, said Dan Conston, president of the Congressio­nal Leadership Fund. Conston, whose group is aligned with House GOP leaders, said with health care, Democrats are betting “their tired, dated arguments will work.”

“Health care is the number one issue that people care about,” counters Rep. Cheri Bustos, D-Ill., who heads the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, House Democrats’ campaign arm. She says Democrats are “on the right side” on law and order, supporting peaceful marchers but denouncing “people who are burning buildings.”

So far, public polling offers scant evidence that the GOP’s law and order arguments have taken hold.

A Monmouth University Poll this month showed voters nationally trust Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden slightly more than Trump to maintain law and order. It also found just 13 percent say it’s highly likely that integratin­g suburbs would worsen crime and harm property values.

A September survey by The New York Times and Siena College found that while majorities in swing states Wisconsin and Minnesota called lawlessnes­s a major U.S. problem, few considered it a primary concern at home.

 ?? AP Photo/Sait Serkan Gurbuz ?? In this 2019 file photo, Rep. Harley Rouda, D-Calif., speaks during a House Oversight and Reform subcommitt­ee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington.
AP Photo/Sait Serkan Gurbuz In this 2019 file photo, Rep. Harley Rouda, D-Calif., speaks during a House Oversight and Reform subcommitt­ee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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