A few weeks ago, Jason Cherkis reported a fascinating anecdote from the Kentucky State Fair a few weeks ago, noting a “middle-aged man in a red golf shirt” who shuffled up to a small folding table to hear about state’s health benefit exchange established by the Affordable Care Act. The man was impressed with what he heard, telling one of the workers behind the table, “This beats Obamacare I hope.”
The man likes the Affordable Care Act. He just didn’t know it.
The story came to mind yesterday looking over the new Obamacare polls from NBC/Wall Street Journal and the Pew Research Center, both of which reinforced the larger trends — the health care reform law remains largely unpopular, even as implementation continues apace. The reason everyone should take the results with a grain of salt, though, has to do with the middle-aged man in a red golf shirt — most Americans still have no idea what Obamacare is.
The public does, however, know what sabotage is, and in this case, it’s far more unpopular than the law itself.
The Pew poll, for example, asked Americans whether they approve or disapprove of the Affordable Care Act. A 42% minority supports the law. But respondents opposed to Obamacare were pressed further and Pew found that only 23% of the public believes officials “should do what they can to make the law fail.”
In other words, less than a fourth of the public endorses the Republican Party’s position on health care. Since many conservatives eager touted the Pew results yesterday, I can only assume they didn’t read the results closely enough.
And who makes up this pro-sabotage contingent that wants public officials to make the federal health care law fail on purpose? Before you say “Republicans,” note that this isn’t the whole story.
Greg Sargent talked to Pew about the “make-Obamacare-fail dead-enders.”









