There Might Be Another Reason Why Biden Didn't Run in 2016
The Addicted, Petty, and Hysterical Left
Axios Continues to Unravel Over the Election, and Who Needs Journalism Ethics When...
The Cold Civil War Is Over. We Won.
Climate Change, Thailand Style
A New Age Begins
Fifty Years and Generations for Justice: The Frank Connor and Trooper Werner...
Is Donald Trump the Second Coming of Andrew Jackson?
Press Victims
A Different Approach in Gaza
I Endured a Military Poisoned by DEI. Pete Hegseth Can Restore It.
Crying Tears of Joy From One Eye, and Tears of Grief From the...
Get Ready: It Turns Out There's Another January 6 Committee
Benjamin Netanyahu Defends Elon Musk
Vice President JD Vance Is Making an Appearance at This Major Event
Tipsheet

Separating the "Reformers" from the Radicals

As Meredith noted below, there are people in the Obama camp who are simply unwilling to surrender the dream of a huge-scale "reform" of health care that would involve the government taking over, for the most part.
Advertisement


In the days going forward, it will be interesting to see the reactions from different Democrat constituencies.  On the one hand, there are the "reformers" -- the people who, in good faith, thought  the health care system needed sweeping change and were willing to support it.  Those, for the most part, now "get" the fact that Americans hated what they were trying to dish up, and are willing to back off.

On the other hand, there are the radicals (many in the Obama camp) who aren't going to go quietly into the good night.  That's because, for them, health care wasn't just about health care -- not even close.  Instead, health care was a political exercise.

Passing a government behemoth program wasn't primarily about improving care or lowering costs.  Rather, they saw it as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to "lock in" a permanent political advantage for liberals.  Once a program was in place, the debate about the role of government would largely end.  Elections would play out on liberal territory -- the only debate would be "how much" government.  And that's a debate that the left (what with the scare tactics about evil Republicans) figured would offer them a permanent leg up.
Advertisement


So take a look.  The more ugly and unhappy a Democrat is at the thought of giving up a huge health care bill . . . the more that -- for that Dem -- it really wasn't about health care at all.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement