The Denver Post

Schumer: Dems’ health focus erred

- By Charles Babington

washington » Senate Democrats’ topmessage­manis urging the party leftward in thewake of crushing midterm election losses, saying working Americans want a robust government that will promote education access, labor bargaining rights, progressiv­e taxes and more.

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said his party erred five years ago by putting health care reform ahead of jobs and economic priorities. The vast majority of Americans were relatively happy with their employer-provided health insurance in 2009, he said, and the health care overhaul’s message was aimed at about 5 percent of the electorate: those who lacked insurance and who voted.

“To aim a huge change in mandate at such a small percentage of the electorate made no political sense,” Schumer said. “Unfortunat­ely Democrats blewthe opportunit­y the American people gave them. We took their mandate and put all of our focus on the wrong problem— health care reform.”

He said he expressed such concerns at the time. His office later said he “expressed those concerns privately to fellow Democrats.”

Schumer’s remarks come a few weeks after Republican­s won control of the Senate and boosted their House majority in the midterm elections. He said the way back to influence on Capitol Hill is to appeal to voters who support “an active and forceful government” to help them cope with globalizat­ion, technology and other forces keeping middle incomes stagnant.

Schumer said Democratsm­ade it easier forRepubli­cans to paint government as bloated and inept with “the rollout of the Obamacare exchanges, the mishandlin­g of the surge in border crossers, ineptitude at the (Department ofVeterans Affairs) and the government’s initial handling of the Ebola threat.”

Schumer oversaw Democrats’ campaign efforts in two highly successful elections, 2006 and 2008, and is chairman of the Democratic Policy andCommuni­cationsCom­mittee. Some see him as a potential successor to Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada.

White House spokesman Eric Schultz told reporters the administra­tion is happy to revisit the health care law “because we believe strongly that the Affordable Care Act is working.”

Republican­s ridiculed Schumer’s call for a more robust federal government.

“The failure of big-government liberalism iswhy liberalswe­re overwhelmi­ngly rebuked at the polls this month,” the conservati­ve group YGNetwork said.

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