Posted on 04/02/2014 6:45:32 AM PDT by Qbert
Anxious Senate Republicans are worried party leaders are focusing too much this election year on ObamaCare and not enough on jobs and the economy.
The concern among GOP centrists comes as President Obama and congressional Democrats are crowing about a surge in late enrollments and claiming the political winds are shifting around the Affordable Care Act.
A growing rift in the GOP was exposed when a group of Senate Republicans recently struck a bipartisan deal to extend unemployment benefits. Neither Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) nor Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) embraced the agreement. Sen. Dean Heller (R-Nev.), who spearheaded efforts to find a compromise on jobless benefits, said, Its my opinion that the Affordable Care Act is going to play in this election, but I dont think its the main issue. I think the main issue is going to be the economy and jobs.
If we have solutions and answers on the economy and jobs, I think that the Affordable Care Act will take a back seat to it. If we think were going to win or lose the majority based on one single piece of legislation ... I think were mistaken.
The error-plagued ObamaCare rollout and the presidents broken promise that people could keep their healthcare plans has helped put Republicans in a strong position to seize the Senate.
But some Republicans, including a senator who requested anonymity, fear the issues potency could fade following the March 31 enrollment deadline as news media move to other stories.
Its got to be a much broader appeal than one piece of legislation, said Heller, who isnt up for reelection in 2014.
Hellers comments are strikingly similar to those from Sen. Charles Schumer (N.Y.) and other Democrats who say voters are not as focused on ObamaCare as Republicans believe.
Heller joined Republican Sens. Susan Collins (Maine), Rob Portman (Ohio), Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) and Mark Kirk (Ill.) to negotiate a five-month extension of unemployment benefits with Democrats.
While Republican leaders talk often about the slowness of the economic recovery, they frequently do so in the context of ObamaCare.
The presidents healthcare plan has such broad-based impact, its hard to escape that as an overriding issue, whether its the impact its had on part-time work or the impact its had on people deciding not to hire back and fill positions, said Sen. Roy Blunt (Mo.), vice chairman of the Senate Republican Conference.
Many Republicans claim ObamaCare is a gift that keeps giving, saying experts predict premiums will skyrocket in coming months and years. House GOP lawmakers hope to unveil an Affordable Care Act replacement later this year.
After months of getting pummeled over the laws botched implementation, Democrats say the tide is beginning to turn in their favor.
The White House on Tuesday touted the enrollment of more than 7 million people, a figure that seemed unattainable mere months ago. Republicans counter that millions lost their healthcare coverage last year because of ObamaCare mandates.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) played offense Tuesday on ObamaCare, a topic he usually avoids.
We all know about the early setbacks with the rollout of ObamaCare, but here it is today; we have a number that no one thought we could arrive at a few months ago, Reid said in introductory remarks at a press conference. People are hungry for the benefits of this law.
GOP strategists warn party leaders not to put all their eggs into the ObamaCare basket if they want to capture as many Democratic seats as possible in November.
Republicans need to be very careful to sketch out a positive vision for the fall as part of their election strategy. If theyre viewed as too focused on ObamaCare and saying bad things about Obama-Care, its a very dour message and not likely to bring over swing voters, said John Ullyot, a former Senate aide and GOP strategist.
Ullyot said swing voters want to see a positive agenda, adding, It may be that ObamaCare is less of a negative six months from now than it is today.
Collins, who is seeking reelection in a Democratic-leaning state, has sought compromise with Democrats on raising the minimum wage to a level below the $10.10 an hour sought by Obama.
In doing so, the senator has broken with McConnell, who has ruled out a boost to the minimum wage as a job killer.
Republican operatives say GOP leaders would be wise to shift some of their emphasis away from ObamaCare now that the enrollment deadline has passed.
Ron Bonjean, a GOP strategist and former Senate and House leadership aide, said, The narrative will likely change somewhat toward the economy once again. ObamaCare will be front and center between now and the election, but the intensity will go down, leaving Republicans a chance to talk about what they would do differently with the economy.
McConnell on Tuesday pivoted away from ObamaCare, urging Reid to allow votes on Republican amendments to spur job creation.
While Senate Democrats dust off the same poll-tested ideas for papering over the symptoms of malaise, Republicans are proposing concrete ideas aimed at igniting the economy and giving people real hope for something more, something better than what theyve been getting for the last five years, something that speaks to their hopes and potential, McConnell said on the floor.
McConnell, who faces a primary and general election challenge, offered an amendment to the pending unemployment benefits package that would stop what he calls the administrations war on coal.
“The three are LITERALLY intertwined.”
Yes they are.
In the past month, I’ve participated in two polls where the number one selection was “jobs and economy” and obamacare was down the list at around number four.
My thinking was that all the other selections, including 0care, fell under jobs and economy, so #1 it was.
RINO LOSERS
Hopefully they do exactly that.
There is no reason that the GOP deserves to win anything at all.
It is a God awful party that needs to wither on the vine fast.
Stop criticizing communism.
The key term here, for me, is “so much”
I tend to agree. We’re on the verge of overplaying our hand and there’s a LONG way to go until the election. We want public opposition to Obamacare to peak the day of the election, not weeks or months before.
We need to dial back the criticism from thermonuclear to high-simmer. Focus in a positive manner on Conservative economic ideals and proposals.
There’s going to be a LOT of unavoidable bad news about Obamacare coming out between now and the election. THOSE are the moments when we crank back up to thermonuclear. Otherwise we open ourselves up to the kind of “There you go again” counterattack that Reagan used to devistating effect ...
O'Care = crappy economy and no jobs. Why can't the dim bulbs communicate that simple message? If you give a free lunch to Tom, Dick and Harry (or Laquisha, Bon'Qui qui and Qua'Lifriaqui'sha'niquia), then Fred is going to go hungry.
"Before we were told to not talk about anything else. Now we cant talk about this. I literally hate these losers."
Yep.
And the GOP-e keeps wringing its hands over this so-called 7 million number. The number to focus on is not 7 million. 7 million represents over 6 million p----d off people- people who lost health care that they were happy with and are now forced into a horrendous system; people who can no longer see the doctors they liked; people who are now paying substantially higher premiums for worse healthcare; people who had to enter their sensitive personal information on an unsecure web site...
We can come up with free-market solutions to help the other 850,000. Anybody who obsesses about the media-trumpeted 7 million number is a fool.
Bosh. I predict record Nielson ratings for The Good Wife, Game of Thrones, DWTS, and American Idol. Now let me doze back off here, bub.
“This sounds good on the surface but between establishment republicans and democrats we (conservatives) are easily out numbered 9 to 1.”
Yes, but despite the odds, despite being only one man in “one half of one third of the government,” Ted Cruz has put both the democrats and the establishment republicans back on their heels several times now. On Gun Control, on Obamacare, on the Debt Ceiling and lately on the IMF.
We need to give him more backup. Schumer and Reid and McConnell have been frustrated last year and this year. We need to cause them even more frustrations with men like TW Shannon, Greg Brannon, Jason Conger, Milton Wolf, Matt Bevin, Rob Maness, Julianne Overton, Joe Carr, Chris McDaniel, and Lee Bright!
Nailed it. Why vote for “Democrat Lite” when I can get the real deal for the same price? We are a one-party system.
Let the Bolshecrats base their elections on a lie.
This is a bogus story. It’s a liberal writer trying to create the idea that Obamacare is now no longer an issue for 2014.
If you saw the statements from Boner and Mcconnel, you know they are not thinking what this guy is writing - as both ripped the victory lap. And those two are the epitome of establishment Republicans.
Ignore.
We have THREE parties already....Dems, GOP Caucus (boehner, cantor et al) and RNC.. read the GOP Platform...that is the RNC...caucus is rogue and highly financed group dividing us.
Knock yourself out.
John served for seven years as chief spokesman and a senior policy advisor for two of the longest-serving Republican U.S. Senators, John Warner and Arlen Specter, and as communications director for two Senate Committees. In the private sector, John was vice president of corporate communications for AOL Europe and Washington spokesman for Intel.
I’m conflicted between “ the faster the crash comes the better “ and “ one last attempt to avert disaster”.
I can understand that, but I don’t think there is one last chance to avert disaster.
Our population has become too stupid and corrupt.
Many of our elder citizens still believe that one half the government is their friend while the other half is their enemy, all the while seeming to ignore that all of them are purposely destroying our country as fast as they can.
Our younger people literally know nothing at all, and their heads are completely full of sh!t.
Harsh, harsh lessons are coming.
It's not for lack of trying. Calling it a steaming load of sh*t is the nicest thing anyone can come up with.
Pansies. They are going to hide under the desks and miss the huge potential to destroy the democrats when obamacare kicks in for the rest of the country.
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