Republican Vance McAllister doesn’t want to repeal Obamacare and he’d rather work with his opponents than destroy them.
In a big upset this weekend, he beat a tea partier in a special election for a House seat in a conservative Louisiana district.
McAllister, a businessman, ran on a conservative platform, both socially and fiscally, but campaigned as pragmatic and compromising person—an anti-establishment candidate to the left of the tea party. He beat out Republican state Sen. Neil Riser, who had the support of a handful of prominent Republicans including House Majority leader Eric Cantor and the tea party. He ran on a far-right, uncompromising platform.
“There’s a wave of pragmatism in some of these primaries,” former White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said on Monday’s Morning Joe.
Riser campaigned on repealing Obamacare, attacking McAllister for saying the law should be amended and fixed. McAllister criticized House Republicans for voting to repeal the healthcare law dozens of times.
“But the truth of the matter is you stand on a platform and pander for votes on something that can’t be repealed,” McAllister told Riser in a debate.
Despite the messy, flawed roll-out of the healthcare law, voters sided with McAllister, who went on to say Louisiana should accept the federally-funded expansion of Medicaid.
“It’s kind of a follow up to what happened in [Alabama’s first district], where you had a businessperson who’s sane and rational winning,” Joe Scarborough said Monday.
Byrne also ran as a businessman and outsider against a far right candidate and won in an off-year election.








