The polls have been pretty consistent for a few years: the Affordable Care Act isn’t popular. The component parts of the Affordable Care Act tend to be very popular, but the right’s misinformation campaign has largely been a striking success: the public has been persuaded to hate the reform law, facts be damned.
With this in mind, if the Republican justices on the Supreme Court kill “Obamacare” in the next few days, plenty of Americans — many of whom stand to lose a great deal from the law’s demise — will feel misguided pleasure.
But as Greg Sargent noted this morning, there’s a catch to public attitudes Republicans need to keep in mind: the American mainstream still has no use for the old, dysfunctional mess, and still wants health care reform.
Today’s Associated Press poll finds that an overwhelming majority, 77 percent, want the President and Congress to start work on a new health bill if Obaamcare is ruled unconstitutional. Only 19 percent want the system left as is. In other words: Americans want reform.
There’s no denying that public opinion on Obamacare has not turned around, as some of us predicted it would. The new poll also finds that only 33 percent support the law, versus 47 percent who oppose it (though the AP doesn’t break out those who think it didn’t go far enough).








