Even in Massachusetts, weak support for Dem health care bill
By:
Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
WashingtonExaminer.com
The race to replace the late Sen. Ted Kennedy in Massachusetts is shaping
up as a referendum on health care reform. If you look inside the numbers of
the
Boston Globe poll -- the one that has Democrat Martha Coakley leading
Republican Scott Brown by 15 percentage points -- you'll see that more voters
name health care reform as the election's top important issue than name jobs
and the economy. That's a striking reversal of opinion among the American
public overall. And just 43 percent of Massachusetts voters support the
Democratic national health care plan now making its way through Congress,
versus 36 percent who oppose. In one of the bluest states in the country --
and one with up-close experience with a state health care regime that
resembles the plan under consideration for the nation as a whole -- that is
strikingly weak support. And that support is pretty much limited to Democrats;
independents and Republicans are opposed.
Breaking down opinion by party, 65 percent of Democrats support reform,
while 11 percent say they oppose it and 20 percent say they don't know. Among
independents, 33 percent favor reform, while 43 percent oppose it and 23
percent say they don't know. And among Republicans, five percent favor reform,
while 82 percent oppose it and 10 percent say they don't know.
Looking a little more closely at the numbers, it's clear that opponents of
reform are far, far more intense in their feelings than supporters. Among
Republicans, 65 percent say they strongly oppose reform, while 17 percent say
they somewhat oppose it (making for that total of 82 percent opposed). Among
Democrats, just 28 percent say they strongly support reform, while 37 percent
say they somewhat favor it (making for the 65 percent total figure). Among
independents, 29 percent strongly oppose it, while just 13 percent strongly
support it.
That intensity of opposition likely accounts for the poll's finding that
Massachusetts voters believe health care reform, and not the economy, is the
most important issue in the race. Among all voters, 31 percent name health
care reform as the most important issue, while 27 percent say jobs and the
economy. Thirty-five percent of Republican voters name health care reform as
the most important issue, versus 20 percent who say jobs and the economy.
Among independents, 29 percent name health care reform, versus 23 percent who
say jobs and the economy. Among Democrats, 29 percent say health care reform,
versus 32 percent who say jobs and the economy.
The bottom line: In a state where support for the Democratic national
health care plan should be strongest, the current bills making their way
through Congress cannot muster majority support. If Coakley is elected, she
will cast the 60th and decisive vote in the Senate to pass a plan that not
even half the people in her home state support.