The fact is this is only the second vote on total repeal, the first one coming in January of 2011 after Americans elected a wave of 63 new Republicans to, you know, repeal ObamaCare. Both votes for full repeal, in 2011 and 2012, were more bipartisan than the vote to pass ObamaCare, with three and five Democrats crossing over to the Republican side, respectively. And, I know we all love when we can work together, across the aisle, to get things undone. Beyond that, many of the votes on the Washington Post's list feature far more Democratic defectors to the anti-ObamaCare side than the other way around.
The figure 33, of course, includes all sorts of bills that were only tangentially about ObamaCare repeal, or tweaked small parts of the bill, often with Democratic endorsement and votes. It includes several bills passed with hard-fought compromise later signed by Obama, like the debt-ceiling deal, and other bills that accomplished Obama's legislative goals, such as the payroll tax cut extension bill.
So, are the House's machinations futile and extreme?
Friday, July 13, 2012
The No. 33, and the surprisingly bipartisan art of repeal � Hot Air
Link: http://hotair.com/archives/2012/07/11/the-no-33-and-the-surprisingly-bipartisan-art-of-repeal/
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