Three weeks ago, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) raised a few eyebrows with some candid comments about his plans for the next session of Congress. Despite the Affordable Care Act’s growing popularity, the Republican leader told Reuters that his party would likely try to repeal “Obamacare” if given the chance.
It would, McConnell added referring to the midterm elections, “depend on what happens in a couple weeks.”
Exactly three weeks later, the Kentucky lawmaker looked at the election results and came to a very different conclusion about what’s possible. The Washington Post reported:
For eight years, Republicans waged a war against Barack Obama’s health-care law, holding dozens of repeal votes, filing lawsuits and branding it a dangerous government takeover.
On Wednesday, they effectively surrendered.
The day after crushing midterm election losses handed Democrats control of the House, GOP leaders signaled they had no appetite to make another go at shredding the signature accomplishment of Obama’s presidency anytime soon.
McConnell specifically told reporters, “I think it’s pretty obvious, the Democratic House is not going to be interested in that,” referring to possible ACA repeal.
The Senate Republican leader added that lawmakers could tackle health care policy “on a bipartisan basis.”









