OBAMA'S HEADWIND ON HEALTH CARE
By DICK MORRIS & EILEEN MCGANN
DickMorris.com
The ups and downs of the published polls about Obama's health care proposals
dramatically illustrate the ferocity of the headwinds he faces as he desperately
tries to sell his program to a suspicious and wary public.
Before Obama addressed the nation and a joint session of Congress, his proposals
drew only 45% approval (Rasmussen). But after he spoke, support for his
health care proposals rose until it peaked at 52%. Then, a scant week
after his speech ended, public support had quietly but quickly eroded back down
to 42%.
It is no surprise that a nationally televised presidential speech can move
support for the chief executive's program by 7 points. But it is shocking
that - in the absence of any other major independent negative event - these new
supporters would flee in the space of one week and that three percent more would
move against him.
That spells big trouble for Obama. It means that the wind is blowing in
his face as he tries to make headway for his health care program. This
seven point post-speech slippage in seven days indicates that all the breakfast
tables and lunch counters, and medical examining rooms are abuzz with
conversation about health care changes, most of it negative to the president's
wishes.
There comes a time in the most heated of political debates when the small media
drowns out the big media and the grass roots outgrow the giant trees.
Nobody has the president's huge microphone. But we all have voices and,
when they swell to a chorus, they dominate the national dialogue.
Bush encountered such sales resistance over Iraq as Johnson did on Vietnam and
Nixon over Watergate. No presidential speech or Congressional phalanx can
out shout an aroused American public. All the tools of spin doctors and
media mavens are useless in the face of a growing public, national consensus is
this idea and this plan are fundamentally flawed.
It is, essentially, a program to force people who don't need it to buy health
insurance so as to lower costs for those who do and to subsidize part of the
price tag by cutting medical care to the elderly.
Will the sixty Democratic Senators and the 76 vote House majority pass it
anyway? It is hard to estimate a politician's capacity for suicide or how
easy it is to lead a political party into oblivion. But, certainly, when
opposition to the president's program grows from the current 42-55 disapproval
into the 35-65 range, Congress must balk rather than march over the cliff.
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