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The Republican-controlled House is poised to vote on a clean repeal of the national health care law. Policy debates aside (my views on the substance of the law are well documented), from a purely political perspective, passing a repeal bill in the House is a no-brainer for Republicans. 

Democrats are making several familiar arguments to counter the repeal drive. Mostly, they are emphasizing the more popular provisions of the law and insisting that repeal will increase the deficit. Yet Democrats tried to make these arguments throughout the health care debate and the 2010 elections to no avail. People view the law as a whole rather than by its component parts and they’ve never bought Democrats’ deficit reduction claims, even when they cite the Congressional Budget Office. As a result, the law remains unpopular.

Democrats are also blasting Republicans for taking on health care rather than jobs at a time of high unemployment – an attempt to turn the tables on the GOP, which used that argument effectively against Democrats in 2010. Yet the reason why the jobs argument resonated when Republicans used it is that Democrats spent 13 months crafting a 2,000-page plus health care bill and maneuvering it through Congress. By contrast, House Republicans will pass a quick two-page repeal of the law, and then move on. Additionally, given that they control just one chamber of Congress rather than both chambers and the presidency, they are unlikely to be held as responsible for the condition of the economy as Democrats were in 2010. To put it another way, if House Republicans passed a bunch of economic bills and the economy took off, would Democrats allow them to take credit for a boom in the 2012 election?

In 2010, Republicans forged a coalition of conservative and independent voters, and if they’re to make further gains in the next election, they’ll have to avoid alienating either group. Passing a repeal of ObamaCare in the House – even one that won’t get through the Senate – is the bare minimum that would be expected of the new majority from conservatives, and the health care law remains unpopular among independents. It has the added bonus of forcing Democrats from conservative districts to cast tough votes. So the GOP has nothing to lose and everything to gain by passing a repeal bill.

View all comments (15) |

Whitney| 1.5.11 @ 12:21PM

WHat's the point of passing this in the House if it will fail in the Senate? Wouldn't it be better to use the majority powers to expose the ills of Obamacare, craft a better alternative healthcare reform legislation, and set the stage for a vote later on?

Eric Cartman| 1.5.11 @ 12:36PM

You can do both. Keep this POS law in the spotlight. hold hearings, highlight the crap in the bill, all the while dismantling the rest of Obmanation.

Al Adab| 1.5.11 @ 12:25PM

If memory serves, the Obamacare bill was passed in the House by a resolution of reconciliation with the Senate version of the bill. There was no vote on the bill itself, just a House resolution reconciling with the Senate bill. Can not the House rescind that reconciliation vote and thereby kill the bill without either Senate concurrence or the need for an executive signature? No signature no veto threat.

SCM| 1.5.11 @ 12:30PM

Using "Republicans" and "no-brainer" in the same sentence could be easily miscontrued. They are not commonly known as The Stupid Party for no reason!

Eric Cartman| 1.5.11 @ 2:06PM

ZING!

I Survived Arlen Specter| 1.5.11 @ 2:49PM

The problem isn't so much a lack of or no brains when considering The Stupid Party SCM. They have brains. They just refuse to use them at times. No, what the lack are a spine & cajones. The Spineless or Ball-less Party perhaps?

Callawyn| 1.5.11 @ 12:53PM

@Al Adab
I believe the House passed the same version of the Senate, and then passed a Reconciliation to 'fix' it after (which the Senate then also passed by simple majority, the reconciliation rules allowing them to do so without a 60 vote cloture, which was impossible after Brown replaced Kennedy)

Mark MacInnis| 1.5.11 @ 12:58PM

Just the idea of him having to actually VETO the repeal in the face of his falling polls for doing so gives me, with apologies to Chris Matthews, chills running up and down my leg....can't wait to hear his speechifying on that August day....

Mark MacInnis| 1.5.11 @ 12:59PM

I meant "august" as in important...not "August" as in the month....

Big Java| 1.5.11 @ 12:59PM

Just get ready, the state run media is gearing up the template that anyone against Obamacare and wanting to reduce the deficit thru reducing spending is nothing but a Nazi...same ole playbook, same ole plays...

gaetano| 1.6.11 @ 12:41AM

Get smart you demobots.We will not fall for any trying to prove that the house is starting of at a stupid pace. They are going to start in full gear and use what power they hold to their full advantage of bringing obama and his administration to its knees.

More Blog Posts by Philip Klein

http://spectator.org/blog/2011/01/05/passing-obamacare-repeal-bill

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