The 2014 midterm elections are little more than
six months away, and already the Republican Party is feeling giddy about the
prospect of big wins in several U.S. Senate races, perhaps enough to give the
GOP control of both houses of Congress. This may appear to be surprising if one
considers that Republicans are in the minority nationally on most key social
and economic issues, especially among Blacks, Latinos and women.
Most Republicans want to repeal the Affordable
Care Act, a.k.a. Obamacare, but they can't agree among themselves on how to
replace it. And they were dealt a bit of a blow when President Barack Obama
announced Tuesday that more than seven million Americans had signed up for
health care by the deadline, far exceeding expectations. That number is likely
to be much higher when the final count is in.
Now the health care law is starting to pick up
some positive momentum, with a recent Washington Post/ABC News poll showing 49%
of all Americans now support the law, while 48% oppose it. That is nearly a 10%
swing to the positive since last November. And the ACA's favorability rating is
likely to improve since the enrollment numbers were so strong, and most of the
Republican lies and myths about the law have been shown to be untrue.
So a Republican controlled Congress will likely
do all it can to bring an end to Obamacare, even if it is piece by piece. What
makes Obamacare so repugnant to many Republicans is that it is viewed as
another "government handout," like food stamps, unemployment insurance
and many social programs. Their view is that the poor and hungry are largely
freeloaders. So if Republicans get their way on Obamacare, several million
people who now have signed up for the ACA will lose health care and have
nothing to replace it.
A majority of Americans across the nation do
not agree with Republicans on most social issues, like same sex marriage and
equal pay for women. Many states, heavily gerrymandered following big GOP wins
in the 2010 state legislative and gubernatorial races, are slowly rolling back
existing social reforms.
The Republican Party is made up largely of
older and white voters. These are the very people who are most likely to vote
during off-year elections, especially when Republicans play on their fears. For
instance, the fallacious cries of death panels? Or the ridiculous charge that
Obama has become the "imperial president." Or, that Obama is
violating the constitution and should be impeached!
Unfortunately for
Democrats, many of those who are mobilized by fear and anti-Obama feelings are
typically not well informed. They are easy prey for GOP political spinmeisters.
And there is no penalty for lying about your opponent.
President Obama was reelected by a sizable
margin with the help of young people, minorities and women. But these voter
groups do not usually turn out in large numbers for midterm elections. To make
matters worse for Democrats, Republican controlled state legislatures are doing
all they can to restrict voting access in many states. For instance, some
states have voted to end voting on Sundays, the only day many minorities, who
work long hours and travel great distances to work, can vote without a loss of
pay. Some Republican controlled statehouses have reduced the number of polling
places, frequently choosing to close those in more heavily Democratic
districts. Republicans claim this is all due to incidents of voter fraud, but
the facts show that the number of voter fraud cases nationally is minuscule.
Of course, Republicans are against any
meaningful immigration reform. They believe that most immigrants who become
citizens will also become Democrats. I wonder why that would happen?
Meanwhile, in
Washington Tuesday, Congressman Paul Ryan (R-WI), the party's budget guru, drew
fire from all sides with his latest federal budget proposal. The Ryan budget
calls for deep cuts in so-called safety net programs, education, job training,
Pell Grants, and for transforming some social programs into "block
grants," which will leave each state to deal with the program. He also
proposes huge tax breaks for the rich. Democrats see Ryan's budget as a real
liability for Republicans. But, not surprisingly, conservative Republicans
think it doesn't go far enough.
Take, for
instance, former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin. "The latest Ryan budget is
not an April Fool's joke," Palin wrote on her Facebook page Tuesday,
"But it really IS a joke because it is STILL not seeing the problem; it
STILL is not proposing reining in wasteful government overspending." The
Palin posting reflects the vast schism that currently exists within the
Republican Party.
Yet, because
more "red state" senate seats are up this election, Republicans are
poised to make some major gains. The challenge for Democrats will be to
mobilize the Obama coalition.
You think
there is gridlock in Washington now? If the GOP wins both houses of Congress in
November, nothing meaningful will get done for two years, and many good social
programs will come under crippling attack. Representative Darrell Issa (R-CA)
will endlessly bask in the television lights as he wastes even more American
taxpayer money investigating everything from Benghazi to the First Family's
dogs.
Democrats
must begin a full court press around the many accomplishments of President
Obama, especially Obamacare. Democrats must go on the offensive now, and rally
party supporters, especially the young, minorities, and women, from coast to
coast. Democrats must make sure that all Americans fully understand what they
may lose if they do not vote this coming November.
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