Senators Demand Answers About Biden's Illegal Ammunition Delay to Israel
The Pro-Terrorism Freaks Just Defaced a U.S. War Memorial
About That Ceasefire 'Agreement' Hamas Accepted...
Pro-Hamas Thugs Tried to Storm the Met Gala
TikTok Admits It's a CCP Asset in Lawsuit Against U.S. Government
The Biden Admin Bows Down to China. Again.
Macklemore in His New Song Praising Pro-Hamas Students: 'F**k No, I'm Not Voting'...
Beyond Parody: Here Are the Insane New Demands of Chicago's Teachers Union
One School Does Away With 'Diversity Statements' From Prospective Faculty
Fani Willis: This Investigation Is 'Messing Up My Business'
Do Abortion Bans Influence Where Young People Choose to Live? A New Poll...
New Data Should Have Team Biden Sweating
Here’s How Harvard University Will Respond to Pro-Hamas Student Protesters
Another Female Athlete Just Boycotted a Competition Against a ‘Trans Woman’
These Democrats Refused to Stand by Israel in Face of Antisemitic College Protests
OPINION

Health care message wars heat up on anniversary of law

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Two years after President Barack Obama signed health care reform legislation -- and with the U.S. Supreme Court about to consider a challenge from several states trying to overturn it -- supporters and opponents of the controversial law are gearing up for a message war like it's 2009.

Advertisement

At that time, Democrats, emboldened by a new president and big gains in Congress, pushed sweeping legislation to expand coverage for uninsured Americans, clashing with Republicans who branded the bill "Obamacare" and warned it would trigger an unprecedented intrusion by Washington into people's medical decisions. Raucous crowds at town halls across the country that summer, many focusing on health care, captured the intensity of the debate. When Democrats muscled the final version of the bill through the House of Representatives in a late-night vote, not one Republican voted for it.

Obama signed his top legislative achievement into law on March 23, 2010, but by then the issue was already shaping up to be a central flashpoint in that year's midterm elections. That November, Democrats were tossed out of the majority in the House after voters elected a new class of 87 Republicans who campaigned on repealing "Obamacare."

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos