Mitch McConnell Continues To Slither Under The Radar: Repeal Obamacare — Except For Kentucky
The other night, the candidates squared off in a televised debate, and the news media takeaway the played directly in McConnell’s favor: Grimes continues to sidestep questions about whether she voted for President Obama and, as Tommy Christopher pointed out, her question-dodging prompted NBC News’s Chuck Todd to outrageously suggest that by refusing to answer the question Grimes has “disqualified herself.” This is somehow the big national story: Grimes’s choice for president, and why she refuses to discuss her votes. Again, we’re not talking about legislative votes or even decisions she’s made as Kentucky’s Secretary of State — her choices in the voting booth.
What’s been almost entirely overlooked out of Kentucky, regardless of the cable news venue, is an issue that speaks directly to the rotting core of the Republican Party. McConnell keeps insisting that he will help to repeal the Affordable Care Act, aka. “Obamacare,” even though a plurality of Kentuckians love the ACA insurance marketplace there, known as “Kynect.” On top of that, 60 percent of Kentuckians support the expansion of Medicaid, as authorized by the ACA. By the way, that 60 percent? I should clarify: it’s 60 percent of Kentucky Republicans. Kentucky Republicans by a supermajority margin support the expansion of Medicaid per the dreaded Obamacare law. Support rises to 79 percent among all Kentuckians.
Yet Mitch McConnell wants to repeal the law. Sort of?… CONTINUE READING
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8 responses to Mitch McConnell Continues To Slither Under The Radar: Repeal Obamacare — Except For Kentucky
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rg9rts October 15th, 2014 at 08:40
Ole turkey wattles is expert at slithering
rg9rts October 15th, 2014 at 08:40
Ole turkey wattles is expert at slithering
Larry Schmitt October 15th, 2014 at 08:49
All Mitch needs is a dictionary, so he can learn what “represent” means. As in “represent your constituents.”
tiredoftea October 15th, 2014 at 14:24
No, he’s got it right. He represents his contributors. The oligarchs who fund Mitch, and everyone else in Congress know that voting is for chumps.
Larry Schmitt October 15th, 2014 at 08:49
All Mitch needs is a dictionary, so he can learn what “represent” means. As in “represent your constituents.”
tiredoftea October 15th, 2014 at 14:24
No, he’s got it right. He represents his contributors. The oligarchs who fund Mitch, and everyone else in Congress know that voting is for chumps.
OldLefty October 21st, 2014 at 06:26
From Jonathan Cohn;
“This Republican Just Made the Best Obamacare Pitch of Any Politician
See if you can guess who just made this statement about Obamacare:
The opposition to it was really either political or ideological. I don’t think that holds water against real flesh and blood, and real improvements in people’s lives.
Was it Barack Obama?
Nancy Pelosi?
Paul Krugman?
Actually, it was John Kasich, governor of Ohio. He’s a Republican, in case you didn’t know.
This is heresy on the political right, although it shouldn’t be.
The reason you don’t hear more praise like this from Republicans is largely political (it’s Obama’s law) and ideological (it involves some government intervention)—which, of course, was precisely Kasich’s point.
http://www.newrepublic.com/article/119913/gop-governor-john-kasich-praises-obamacare-says-good-ohio
OldLefty October 21st, 2014 at 06:26
From Jonathan Cohn;
“This Republican Just Made the Best Obamacare Pitch of Any Politician
See if you can guess who just made this statement about Obamacare:
The opposition to it was really either political or ideological. I don’t think that holds water against real flesh and blood, and real improvements in people’s lives.
Was it Barack Obama?
Nancy Pelosi?
Paul Krugman?
Actually, it was John Kasich, governor of Ohio. He’s a Republican, in case you didn’t know.
This is heresy on the political right, although it shouldn’t be.
The reason you don’t hear more praise like this from Republicans is largely political (it’s Obama’s law) and ideological (it involves some government intervention)—which, of course, was precisely Kasich’s point.
http://www.newrepublic.com/article/119913/gop-governor-john-kasich-praises-obamacare-says-good-ohio