GOP surrenders on Obamacare: Why they slashed spending on anti-ACA ads

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From Salon:

Wednesday, Aug 20, 2014 11:25 AM EDT

GOP surrenders on Obamacare: Why they slashed spending on anti-ACA ads

The right's dream of flogging Obamacare all the way to November is over, and they're scrambling for a new strategy

Simon Maloy


The Obamacare air war is turning out to be one of the most interesting facets of the 2014 midterms. At the end of last year and in early 2014, Republicans and conservative pundits were forthright in their belief that the Affordable Care Act and its many implementation-related stumbles were political kryptonite for Democrats, and many millions of dollars were spent producing and airing advertisements attacking the law and anyone with a (D) next to their name who was even tangentially associated with it.

The strategy made sense at the time: The Affordable Care was going through a public relations nightmare, and GOP strategists saw not only a political weapon to use against the Democrats, but an enduring policy failure that would not get better. “Fixing the website problems will not fix Obamacare,” Republican pollster Whit Ayres wrote in November 2013. “The myriad problems identified by Republicans throughout the congressional debate are becoming obvious as the law is implemented. Policies are being canceled. Requirements to buy comprehensive policies that people do not want or need are causing premiums to skyrocket. Healthy young people are not signing up.” That message, and the promise of anti-Obamacare ads sinking Democrats, was eaten up by pundits.

And so the negative ACA ads blared across competitive districts and states, completely drowning out the mild whisper of pro-ACA advertisements by a factor of 15-to-1.

But in the months since the law’s rollout, the many problems Obamacare faced – broken website, skyrocketing premiums, insufficient numbers of young enrollees – were either fixed or never materialized. And Obamacare, contrary to Republican expectations, started working. Enrollees started receiving benefits and benefiting from subsidized coverage. And now, according to Bloomberg, spending on anti-ACA advertisements has plummeted:

Republicans seeking to unseat the U.S. Senate incumbent in North Carolina have cut in half the portion of their top issue ads citing Obamacare, a sign that the party’s favorite attack against Democrats is losing its punch.

The shift — also taking place in competitive states such as Arkansas and Louisiana — shows Republicans are easing off their strategy of criticizing Democrats over the Affordable Care Act now that many Americans are benefiting from the law and the measure is unlikely to be repealed.

Thus died the Republican dream of riding Obamacare to a crushing midterm victory. As Bloomberg put it, the focus is shifting from simply attacking the ACA to linking it to economic ills, like the slow recovery and the weak job market. “The party’s experience across the country shows that Republicans can’t count on the issue to motivate independent voters they need to oust Democrats in Arkansas, Louisiana and Alaska,” Bloomberg reports.

This is the culmination of a broader trend – spotted long ago by some sharp observers – in which the ACA has slowly receded as a political issue and forced Republicans to subtly recalibrate their positions on the law. GOP candidates in tough Senate races have tweaked their anti-ACA attacks from “REPEAL IT NOW, TEAR IT OUT ROOT AND BRANCH!” to “Yes repeal but maybe also keep some stuff.” Their positions are nonsensical and contradictory. And they all suffer from a critical lack of specificity, given the Republican Party’s general unwillingness to say which policy they’d put in the Affordable Care Act’s place once they repeal it. You get the strong sense that Republicans just never expected the law to actually work and don’t really know what to do now that it is.

They have to dance around the issue like this because “full repeal” became an impossibility once the law went into effect. Bloomberg spotlighted the example of a Romney voter in North Carolina who enrolled for coverage through Obamacare when she hit hard times. “Duke, who lost her flooring business after her husband died last year, says she now has a favorable view of the measure and is angry at her state’s Republican governor, Pat McCrory, for refusing to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.” It’s stories like those that push Republicans away from the hard-line repeal message.

As for the ads themselves, Republicans have been concerned for a while now that the flood of anti-Obamacare messaging early on left public opinion ossified. Polling from the Kaiser Family Foundation bears that out: Since 2010, approval of the law has been basically static among self-identified Democrats, Republicans and Independents. There’s even an argument to be made that the overwhelming quantity of negative advertising actually boosted ACA enrollment by raising awareness of the law and, counterintuitively, encouraging people to take advantage of Obamacare’s benefits before the GOP-promised repeal happened.

What will likely happen sometime in the coming months, as we get closer to Election Day, is the volume of Obamacare ads will once again spike – not because they’ll have regained their effectiveness, but because Republicans will want to claim that anti-Obamacare sentiment motivated people to go vote. From that, they’ll claim a mandate to undo the law, even though they’re spending the midterm home stretch shifting their focus to issues other than the Affordable Care Act.
 
Seems like only yesterday that the #GutlessMarines of the General Board (AJ, Miles and the Vetteman) were threatening #DireConsequences about Obamacare come November 2014. Betcha By Golly Wow, Yessiree Bobcat, Republicans were gonna run loud and long on Obamacare.

Funny how that didn't work out for 'em quite the way they'd planned, eh?

Only the most die-hard #TrueBelieverWingnuts (contrifan and landslider2000 come to mind) are still insisting that Obamacare is a failure, because...because...REASONS! :D
 
Obamacare is the new gay. Either you have it, have a relative who has it, or have a friend who has it.

Any politician who campaigns on repealing Obamacare has no idea whose insurance he/she may be talking about taking away. Voters maybe generally apathetic in a mid term election, but the last thing the GOP wants to do is give the working poor of this country a reason to vote, this time around.
 
The establishment GOP may have surrendered, but America is still against this failing monstrosity so conservatives will continue to fight absurd socialism.

Why waste your breath moaning at the crowd?
Nothing can be done to stop the shouting!
If every tongue were stilled the noise would still continue,
The rocks and stones themselves would start to sing!

OH! Bama hey bama, bama, bama, ho!
Bama hey bama OH! Bama!
 
The establishment GOP may have surrendered, but America is still against this failing monstrosity so conservatives will continue to fight absurd socialism.

How does this work? If America is against Obamacare, has the GOP abandoned an issue which would give them a majority in the Senate and a veto proof House?
 
Maybe they'll concentrate on repealing the socialist mortgage interest deduction instead.
 
Latest RCP numbers

For ACA 40%
Against ACA 60%



Yup. Well loved by America.

We've been over this many times before -- at least half the antis are anti because the ACA does not go far enough and they want single-payer or something.
 
Spin, baby, spin!

The LL loves you!

Spin? Are you kidding? That means 70% of Americans either like the ACA, or wish it had gone further. Only 30% want to see it gone. That's not spin. In an election they call that a landslide. The Republicans have clearly taken note.

I'm opposed to the ACA, by the way. Have been from the start.
 
We've been over this many times before -- at least half the antis are anti because the ACA does not go far enough and they want single-payer or something.

Like myself. ACA is the worst of both worlds as far as I'm concerned. National health care is a necessary service, like roads, education or national defense.
 
Like myself. ACA is the worst of both worlds as far as I'm concerned. National health care is a necessary service, like roads, education or national defense.



I'm confused, but realize that you are a fucking idiot. you don't want national health care, you want welfare
 
Spin? Are you kidding? That means 70% of Americans either like the ACA, or wish it had gone further. Only 30% want to see it gone. That's not spin. In an election they call that a landslide. The Republicans have clearly taken note.

I'm opposed to the ACA, by the way. Have been from the start.


so you are for America becoming a third world country like the Britain?
 
We've been over this many times before -- at least half the antis are anti because the ACA does not go far enough and they want single-payer or something.

Pretty much my beef.....

I don't see how it's worse than what we had before.

It's not....but it's not really better either and hearing people like Rob blow hot air all day about how amazing that giant bullshit rip off is because in the most microscopic and truly unimportant way possible.......there has been just the ittiest bitty bit of progress. Now I know for the O cheerleader squad that's it!! A lame as fuck attempt = auto champion, best thing ever, love republican HC systems meant to suck off big insurance/pharma at the expense of the citizenry. Good job!!

They want to award POTUS a Gold medal when we should have fucking crucified the lying shit bird along with the rest of capital hill for fucking us.....shit they had his name on it just for existing. Straight stole it from a republican? Total big insurance/pharma dick suck at the expense of the people? Suuuuuuure....why shouldn't we be enthused about that piss soaked 94 tracker, best deal EVER it only cost 2.7 Trillion. :rolleyes: Totally not a problem, haven't you herd? ACA is the best HC system EVER!!:confused: How can you not know this?

Not a single one of the libby fucks has stopped to ask why on Earth for the most astronomically expensive HC system ever created, we only have the 38th best health care?:confused:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Health_Organization_ranking_of_health_systems_in_2000

It couldn't possibly be because the people are getting totally fucked could it?

Naawwwww all hail Obama!! ACA was just the fix we needed....no more problems.

:rolleyes:
 
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Oh I get why your pissed Bot, I think your goals are unrealistic but I get it. Warmed over Republican is the best we can do. We'll revisit this is 203? and eithe rway that was going to happen so it was either take what you can get or accomplish nothing.
 
Oh I get why your pissed Bot, I think your goals are unrealistic but I get it. Warmed over Republican is the best we can do. We'll revisit this is 203? and eithe rway that was going to happen so it was either take what you can get or accomplish nothing.

I know damn it......fuckin' lame......

Maybe someday M'uricuh will pass some legislation not focused on how to extract more pennies from the poor to give to the rich.
 
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