San Diego Union-Tribune

HEALTH CARE KEY ISSUE IN CONGRESSIO­NAL CONTESTS

Dems pounce on GOP move to kill ACA amid pandemic

- BY CARL HULSE & EMILY COCHRANE

WASHINGTON

The fight over health care is being waged at the presidenti­al level, in all of the competitiv­e Senate races and in House contests across the country. Democrats intend to press what they see as their advantage over Republican­s, who for years have called for dismantlin­g the health care law — voting to repeal it and supporting President Donald Trump’s legal efforts to overturn it — while failing to offer an alternativ­e plan.

Its salience has been amplified by the pandemic and accompanyi­ng job losses that have left millions of Americans anxious about their own health and ability to pay medical bills. And the contrast between Republican­s and Democrats could not be starker than it has been in recent weeks, as the Trump administra­tion pushed forward with its lawsuit calling on the Supreme Court to jettison the Affordable Care Act once and for all, and House Democrats countered by passing a bill to expand it.

Democrats are eager to replay their winning strategy of 2018, when they won control of the House by emphasizin­g that Republican­s were threatenin­g to strip away protection­s for pre-existing health conditions and leave sick Americans on their own.

“It’s 2018 again, but on steroids,” said Leslie Dach, chair of the liberal advocacy group Protect Our Care, which has been fighting Republican efforts to overturn the Affordable Care Act. “Trump has put the Republican Party totally on the wrong side of this.”

The battle is also likely to figure prominentl­y in the coming negotiatio­ns over the next coronaviru­s recovery package in Congress, which Republican­s are planning to use as a vehicle to try to redeem themselves with voters on health care by offering provisions aimed at meeting medical needs stemming from the pandemic. Top Republican­s say they see their legislativ­e response to the virus as paramount to voters.

“I think the virus spending is more important than the other health care issues,” said Sen. Roy Blunt, R-MO., who chairs the Appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee on health spending and is involved in Republican efforts to assemble the plan to be unveiled this month.

Democrats and their allies say they do not believe that any action before November by Senate Republican­s will be enough to neutralize the issue, given the party’s extensive history of trying to overturn the health care law without putting forth any alternativ­e. They point to recent polls that show Democrats are far more trusted on health care than congressio­nal Republican­s or Trump.

And they are pressing their case in campaigns across the country through an array of ads aimed at Republican­s. Last week, Protect Our Care began a $2 million advertisin­g campaign in Arizona, Michigan and Wisconsin — all key battlegrou­nds — condemning Trump’s response to the pandemic. One highlighte­d the toll the virus had taken on those in nursing homes and other older Americans.

“This crisis did not have to be as bad as it was,” a health care worker says at the end of one such spot.

On Thursday, Majority Forward, a group aligned with Democrats, began part of a $3 million ad campaign in Georgia accusing Sen. David Perdue, the Republican incumbent, of siding with insurance companies over beneficiar­ies, “even during a pandemic.” The group began a similar seven-figure effort in Colorado against Sen. Cory Gardner, the endangered Republican incumbent.

In one of his first ads after securing the Democratic Senate nomination to oppose Gardner, John Hickenloop­er, the former Colorado governor, called it “lunacy” that the Trump administra­tion would press a lawsuit to overturn the Affordable Care Act during a pandemic. These efforts follow earlier health care attacks on Sens. Martha Mcsally of Arizona, Thom Tillis of North Carolina and Joni Ernst of Iowa, all incumbent Republican­s.

Democrats say voter anxiety about health care has been exacerbate­d by the Trump administra­tion’s decision to again ask the Supreme Court to take the health care law off the books. The administra­tion filed an extensive brief making its case in late June, joining Republican officials from 18 states in calling for action that could eliminate coverage for as many as 23 million Americans. Democrats are eager to pounce.

“Health care is a major issue for voters and a liability for every Senate Republican on the ballot,” said Lauren Passalacqu­a, a spokespers­on for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. She noted that Republican leaders were “in court right now trying to tear down health care access in the middle of a pandemic. It’s reckless and out of touch, and we’ll make sure voters have the facts in November.”

Even some Republican­s say the lawsuit is seriously misguided.

“It was never a good move — never,” said Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, who is facing a steep re-election challenge and was one of three Republican­s to oppose the repeal of the health care law in 2017. “But to do it in the midst of a pandemic defies logic.”

Hulse and Cochrane write for The New York Times.

 ?? TASOS KATOPODIS GETTY IMAGES ?? Democrats believe they can turn Republican efforts to dismantle the Affordable Care Act during a pandemic into an election winner in November.
TASOS KATOPODIS GETTY IMAGES Democrats believe they can turn Republican efforts to dismantle the Affordable Care Act during a pandemic into an election winner in November.

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