ObamaCare’s Casualty List
Three elections later, the law
continues to be a political catastrophe for Democrats.
From the Wall Street Journal
Mary Landrieu ’s defeat in Saturday’s Louisiana
Senate runoff was no surprise, but that doesn’t mean it should be ignored as
inevitable. Ms. Landrieu was a widely liked three-term incumbent, and her GOP
foe was hardly a juggernaut, yet she lost by 14 points after Washington
Democrats all but wrote her off. Think of Ms. Landrieu as one more Democrat who
has sacrificed her career to ObamaCare.
It’s hard to find another vote in
modern history that has laid waste to so many political careers. Sixty
Democrats cast the deciding 60th vote for the Affordable Care Act in 2009 and
2010, but come January only 30 will be left in the Senate. That’s an
extraordinary political turnover in merely three elections, the largest in the
post-Watergate era. As it happens, the law has been nearly as politically
catastrophic for Democrats as Watergate was for Republicans.
Three of the ObamaCare 60 died in
office, while 19 declined to run for re-election. Some of the retirees left for
reasons such as becoming Secretary of State ( John
Kerry ), but others left because their own re-election prospects
were hardly stellar. Think Chris Dodd of Connecticut in 2010 or Virginia’s Jim
Webb in 2012. At least Democrats succeeded them.
Yet no fewer than eight of the
retirees handed their seats to Republicans: They include Ben Nelson, of Cornhusker
Kickback fame, who deprived his state of the pleasure of returning him to
private life in 2010. After five terms, Jay Rockefeller was increasingly out of
step with West Virginia, not least on ObamaCare. Max Baucus (Montana), Tim
Johnson (S.D.) and Byron Dorgan (N.D.) would have had rough rides had they
tried to stick around.
When they got the chance, voters
dumped eight ObamaCare incumbents who dared to seek re-election. In addition to
Ms. Landrieu, four are moderate-in-name-only Democrats who went along with
President Obama ’s lurch to the left: Mark Begich (Alaska), Kay Hagan (North
Carolina), Blanche Lincoln and Mark Pryor (Arkansas).
But conventional liberals like Russ
Feingold (Wisconsin) and Mark Udall (Colorado) also lost in states Mr. Obama
carried twice. In Pennsylvania, Arlen Specter left the GOP to vote for ObamaCare
after Republican Pat Toomey announced he’d run against him in a primary.
Specter, since deceased, lost the Democratic primary to Joe Sestak, who lost to
Mr. Toomey in two degrees of ObamaCare separation.
Mr. Obama told Democrats at a March
2010 pep rally that he knew they faced “a tough vote” but was “actually
confident” that “it will end up being the smart thing to do politically because
I believe that good policy is good politics.” That month, New York Senator
Chuck Schumer claimed on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that “by November those who
voted for health care will find it an asset, those who voted against it will find
it a liability.”
Mr. Schumer has since recanted,
calling ObamaCare a disaster for the party of government. Nancy Pelosi said his remarks were “beyond comprehension,”
which for liberals like her happens to be true. Their goal is to expand the
entitlement state whether the public likes it or not, figuring that sooner or
later enmity will subside and new programs will acquire a constituency. So it
has always been in the Entitlement Age—until ObamaCare.
The law was supposed to be a
landmark of liberal governance but is more unpopular now than on the day it
passed. Credulous Democrats are telling each other that the insurance exchanges
are working, yet voters are dissatisfied with the higher costs and fewer
choices, Republicans continue to campaign and win on repeal, and a potentially
debilitating legal challenge to the subsidies will be heard at the Supreme
Court this spring.
Liberals like Ms. Pelosi take solace
in believing that these losses were worth passing national health care, but she
may be wrong even about that political bet. ObamaCare is so unpopular that
Republicans may still have a chance to rewrite it after 2016, and even Hillary Clinton may acknowledge the need to
reform the reform.
Such is the political price
Democrats are paying for ignoring voters and passing what we called at the time
the worst law since FDR ’s National Industrial Recovery Act and the
Smoot-Hawley tariff.
No comments:
Post a Comment