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napkinz

(17,199 posts)
Thu Mar 20, 2014, 03:47 PM Mar 2014

Decision Time: Run From Obamacare or Run ON Obamacare (hint: go with the latter!)

[font size="3"]1. Democrats Are In For a World of Hurt If They Keep Running From Obamacare[/font]

by Kevin Drum
March 18, 2014

-snip-

There ought to be lots of people who have been helped by Obamacare too. So why haven't the airwaves been blanketed with their stories? Dave Weigel says the answer here is simpler: yes, there are plenty of feel-good Obamacare stories. But Democratic campaigns have neither the money nor, apparently, the DESIRE to use them:

-snip-

So Families USA can't or won't help candidates, and the candidates themselves don't have the money to compete. And even if they did, their fear of Obamacare is so palpable that they're probably afraid to campaign positively on it anyway. This is, needless to say, a self-fulfilling prophecy: Republicans make Obamacare toxic with misleading ads; Democrats are afraid to fight back because they don't want to be tainted by Obamacare; and this leaves the field wide open to making Obamacare even more toxic.

Democrats are going to be in a world of hurt this year if they keep this up. There's no running from Obamacare. There just isn't. If they want to win, they'd better emerge from their fetal crouch and start fighting back. Nobody likes candidates who won't stand up and defend their own party's achievements.

read more: http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2014/03/democrats-are-world-hurt-if-they-keep-running-obamacare





[font size="3"]2. Memo to Democrats: Running from Barack Obama won’t work[/font]

by Chris Cillizza
March 18, 2014

West Virginia Rep. Nick Rahall has a problem. He's a Democrat running for reelection this November in a district where President Obama won just 33 percent of the vote in 2012. And he's trying to run as far away from Obama as possible. But it's not working.

Earlier this month, Rahall -- in an attempt to argue his independence from the national Democratic Party -- told The Hill newspaper that he "probably" supported George W. Bush more when the Republican was in the White House than he has supported President Obama.

-snip-

The message then is the same as the message now: No matter how much or little you support the president of your party, you will be forced to own that president by the opposing candidate/campaign.

-snip-

... the reality for most candidates, especially in the House, is that there just is no way to run away from your president. Rahall, whose poll numbers are plummeting, is learning that lesson right now. And he's learning it the hard way.

read more: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2014/03/18/memo-to-democrats-running-from-barack-obama-wont-work/





[font size="3"]3. A Midterm Imperative[/font]

by Eugene Robinson
March 18, 2014

WASHINGTON -- Here is what Democrats should learn from their party's loss in a special House election in Florida last week: Wishy-washy won't work.

Republicans are obviously going to make opposition to the Affordable Care Act the main theme of their campaigns this fall. Democrats will be better off if they push back hard -- really hard -- rather than seek some nonexistent middle ground.

-snip-

But as a campaign position, "fix what's wrong" sounds weak and equivocal -- especially when contrasted with the bold GOP promise of repeal.

-snip-

Democrats facing close contests this fall should play offense on Obamacare, not defense. They should tell voters that the ACA is a landmark achievement -- the biggest expansion of access to health care in decades, fulfilling a long-held progressive dream. They should accuse their GOP opponents of playing voters for fools by cynically pretending that repeal is just around the corner.

Democrats should talk about what's right with the ACA. They should talk about the millions of formerly uninsured Americans who now have coverage. They should talk about the millions of others who are covered for the first time under Medicaid. They should talk about the young people who are able to be covered under their parents' policies. They should talk about the diabetics and cancer survivors who now cannot be denied coverage because of their conditions.

read more: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2014/03/18/a_midterm_imperative_121964.html





[font size="3"]4. It’s Time for Democrats to Embrace Obamacare[/font]

by John Cassidy
March 12, 2014

-snip-

Trying to pussyfoot around Obamacare was an awkward strategy, and, evidently, it didn’t work. If other Democrats are to avoid meeting Sink’s fate in November, they need something more convincing to say about the Affordable Care Act than “mend it, don’t end it,” which is now their default position. But what could that be?

Here’s a heretical idea. Rather than parsing the individual elements of the law, and trying to persuade voters on an à la carte basis, what about raising the stakes and defending the reform in its entirety as a historic effort to provide affordable health-care coverage to tens of millions of hard-working Americans who otherwise couldn’t afford it? Instead of shying away from the populist and redistributionist essence of the reform, which the White House and many Democrats in Congress have been doing since the start, it’s time to embrace it.

What would that mean? It would involve reaching out to the Democratic Party’s core voters—lower-income people, minorities, highly educated liberals—and portraying Obamacare as the fulfillment of the great human-rights project that began in the nineteen-thirties, under Franklin D. Roosevelt, and was expanded during the nineteen-sixties, under Lyndon Johnson. That message wouldn’t merely be more honest; it would be more effective in getting Democratic voters to turn out in November, which is essential if the Party isn’t to suffer a repeat of 2010.

read more: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/johncassidy/2014/03/its-time-for-democrats-to-embrace-obamacare.html







25 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Decision Time: Run From Obamacare or Run ON Obamacare (hint: go with the latter!) (Original Post) napkinz Mar 2014 OP
Running ON Obamacare ... napkinz Mar 2014 #1
Oh, are we not doing this anymore? Cirque du So-What Mar 2014 #2
Perhaps they should run on having a spine. nyquil_man Mar 2014 #3
this was posted a few years ago by another member ... napkinz Mar 2014 #5
I think the one in the corner is what you are going to see out of a lot of Congressional Ds davidpdx Mar 2014 #16
this is what I'd like to see more of ... napkinz Mar 2014 #21
Yes! sheshe2 Mar 2014 #4
you're welcome sheshe2 :) napkinz Mar 2014 #6
napkinz... sheshe2 Mar 2014 #7
AWESOME.. sendero Mar 2014 #20
kick napkinz Mar 2014 #8
In 2016 the Obamacare FINE will be $695 per adult. That's serious money. nt Demo_Chris Mar 2014 #9
ACA being the FIRST step, let's hope napkinz Mar 2014 #11
Obama was elected with a majority in the House and a Super in the Senate... Demo_Chris Mar 2014 #13
Just mention the fact you can't be denied coverage and seveneyes Mar 2014 #10
Exactly. lumberjack_jeff Mar 2014 #12
Yeah, don't sit around and whine about like Cha Mar 2014 #14
and let's point out the real "death panels" ... napkinz Mar 2014 #22
Exactly "the real death panels", napkinz. Scary Graphics. Cha Mar 2014 #23
Here in Chicago we are blanketed with tv, billboard and radio adds FOR ACA mucifer Mar 2014 #15
I think there are going to be quite a few spinless Ds who run away from both the ACA and Obama davidpdx Mar 2014 #17
"Wishy-washy won't work" Vattel Mar 2014 #18
Or you could run on taking it further n/t eridani Mar 2014 #19
kick napkinz Mar 2014 #24
That this article exists says all you need to know about Dems WhaTHellsgoingonhere Mar 2014 #25

napkinz

(17,199 posts)
1. Running ON Obamacare ...
Thu Mar 20, 2014, 03:58 PM
Mar 2014

The Koch Brothers are funding commercials that feature distortions, lies, and bogus claims coming from ignorant victims, political operatives, or actors.

Well have REAL PEOPLE, WITH REAL STORIES. Where are our commercials?

Below is a handful of success stories. And there are thousands more! IMAGINE an ad blitz for the next eight months, TV ads that feature these real-life success stories:



































































source: https://www.facebook.com/acasuccessstories

see also: https://twitter.com/ACASuccessStory





Cirque du So-What

(25,913 posts)
2. Oh, are we not doing this anymore?
Thu Mar 20, 2014, 03:58 PM
Mar 2014

Has a certain hissy fit so infected DU that an appeal to support the ACA - no matter how profound - doesn't even generate a single reply?

nyquil_man

(1,443 posts)
3. Perhaps they should run on having a spine.
Thu Mar 20, 2014, 04:02 PM
Mar 2014

If you're willing to back Obamacare, do it wholeheartedly. If you aren't willing to back Obamacare, present your alternative and fight for it.

It's this hemming and hawing crap that does the most damage.

davidpdx

(22,000 posts)
16. I think the one in the corner is what you are going to see out of a lot of Congressional Ds
Sat Mar 22, 2014, 07:23 AM
Mar 2014

this year.

sheshe2

(83,708 posts)
4. Yes!
Thu Mar 20, 2014, 04:06 PM
Mar 2014

Thank you napkinz!

They need to get out there and stand up for Obamacare. It's making a huge difference for so many people.

GOTV 2014

Great OP, napkinz.

sendero

(28,552 posts)
20. AWESOME..
Sat Mar 22, 2014, 08:15 AM
Mar 2014

...post and yes this is what Democrats have to do. Obamacare is not perfect, it is not even great, but it is a damn site better than what we had before.

If you are a Democratic politician and you are against Obamacare, get the fuck out of our party.

napkinz

(17,199 posts)
11. ACA being the FIRST step, let's hope
Fri Mar 21, 2014, 12:27 PM
Mar 2014

in the 2016 elections we win the House, Senate, and White House and can finish the journey and get to single-payer!









 

Demo_Chris

(6,234 posts)
13. Obama was elected with a majority in the House and a Super in the Senate...
Sat Mar 22, 2014, 02:09 AM
Mar 2014

Single payer is finished. We just handed the insurance industry a hundred Billion a year subsidy plus guaranteed customers. They are never going to let that go.

 

seveneyes

(4,631 posts)
10. Just mention the fact you can't be denied coverage and
Thu Mar 20, 2014, 08:14 PM
Mar 2014

we will fix the screwup where doctors can't always prescribe the medicine you may need.

 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
12. Exactly.
Fri Mar 21, 2014, 12:52 PM
Mar 2014

Prior to Obamacare Will wouldn't have been working with an miserly insurance company and extortionist drug company to get his wife's meds filled, because she wouldn't have insurance - they would have dropped her for more profitable customers.

He wouldn't be calling insurance and drug companies, he'd be calling bankruptcy attorneys.

Cha

(297,025 posts)
14. Yeah, don't sit around and whine about like
Sat Mar 22, 2014, 05:32 AM
Mar 2014

..the glass is emptyheads on the internet.'

Thanks napkinz

mucifer

(23,521 posts)
15. Here in Chicago we are blanketed with tv, billboard and radio adds FOR ACA
Sat Mar 22, 2014, 06:44 AM
Mar 2014

The campaign is called "Get Covered Illinois"

davidpdx

(22,000 posts)
17. I think there are going to be quite a few spinless Ds who run away from both the ACA and Obama
Sat Mar 22, 2014, 07:27 AM
Mar 2014

I'm in the district of a bluedog (Schrader) and that's exactly what I think he'll do. I'll eat my shoe and post a pic on DU if I'm wrong.

 

Vattel

(9,289 posts)
18. "Wishy-washy won't work"
Sat Mar 22, 2014, 07:28 AM
Mar 2014

Last edited Sat Mar 22, 2014, 08:11 AM - Edit history (1)

Robinson nailed that one. Dem candidates should strongly support Obamacare as a step in the right direction that has already helped thousands.

Edited to add: Remember this classic wishy-washiness during the presidential campaign in 2004?

MR. RUSSERT: As you well know, this is a 50-50 race between Bush and Kerry, but there is one area where the president has opened up in a significant lead. And in the interest of candor and clarity, I want to give you a chance to answer a question right up top, and I promise we'll talk about the nuance later on. But the American people, I think, would like a yes or no answer: Do you believe the war in Iraq was a mistake?

SEN. KERRY: I think the way the president went to war is a mistake.

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