General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe GOP can't quit Obamacare repeal because of their donors
Senate Republicans are trying yet again to repeal Obamacare, despite seemingly having all the political and substantive reasons in the world not to.
Like all the other bills, the newest one, sponsored by Sens. Lindsey Graham and Bill Cassidy, is horrendously unpopular, with only 24 percent support. The rushed and slipshod process around the bill means its consequences still arent well understood, but its clear enough that tens of millions of people would likely lose coverage if it passes, that several states represented by Republican senators would lose billions of dollars in federal funding, and that the bill badly violates President Trumps campaign promise not to cut Medicaid.
Instead of putting repeal to the side after its failure in the Senate in July, though, Republicans just keep coming back to it, and are pushing toward a Senate vote on Graham-Cassidy this week. Theyre doing so in part because they feel obligated to fulfill a longtime campaign promise, and because they fear electoral consequences for being viewed as failures.
But one more crucial motivator explains a whole lot: Republican Party donors want it.
The evidence that the GOP is trying to please donors here is adding up. An anonymous Republican senator told Politico that McConnell might be returning to health care to show donors that the Senate GOP tried again. Senate Republicans were warned at a private meeting that fundraising was slow because donors were disappointed at their lack of accomplishments, per the New York Times. And in recent months, senators faced an unrelenting barrage of confrontations with some of their closest supporters, donors and friends over Obamacare repeals failure, according to the Washington Post.
This pressure seems to be able to move votes. One moderate senator, Dean Heller (R-NV), conspicuously switched from being a public critic of repeal efforts to a strong supporter of Graham-Cassidy. That came after he reportedly got an earful from Sheldon Adelson and Steve Wynn, two billionaire GOP donors in his state.
Steve Schmidt, who ran John McCains presidential campaign in 2008, told Vox recently that donor concerns seem to be dictating the GOPs legislative strategy. Theres not an actual human constituency for any aspect of the Republican Congressional agenda, Schmidt says. Instead its an inside game that is judged, win or lose, on the basis of which entrenched permanent interests gain advantage or disadvantage, and how that affects the endless fundraising process.
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/the-gop-cant-quit-obamacare-repeal-because-of-their-donors/ar-AAss4i5?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartanntp
Warpy
(111,329 posts)because it represented government interference with the Invisible Hand Fairy of the free market. They honestly thought insurance oligopolies would suddenly provide care instead of looking for ways to deny it, and that prices would magically stabilize.
And yes, they do believe in the Invisible Hand Fairy with every fibre of their being. What the free market actually does to us is of absolutely no concern to them. It's principle!
Ken Burch
(50,254 posts)whose repeated delays in covering one character's cancer treatment probably caused that character's death, was named "Denialcare".
BigmanPigman
(51,624 posts)her that the mega rich donors are relentlessly pressuring them to get their tax cuts. They all have a price and can be bought off. This is and has always been about $$$$ and never was about people or health. The GOP steals from the poor and gives to the rich. They are sick, sick, sick since they love torturing millions with this BS for 8 Months! And they sleep well at night! FUCK the GOP!