Politically Uncorrected: Winning the Battle, Losing the War

G. Terry Madonna & Michael L. Young suggest that the Supreme Court's Obama care decision will inversely impact the parties: a win for the GOP means a White House loss, but a Dem win could energize Romney supporters.

The New York Times calls Pennsylvania a “toss up state.” Others have tagged it a “battleground state” and even a “swing state.”

Electoral labels aside, Pennsylvania’s 20 electoral votes comprise the second-largest prize among the competitive states. Not surprisingly, both presidential campaigns seem to be taking the state seriously despite Barack Obama’s approximate 8-point lead and a string of Democratic victories stretching back to 1988.

But if the Keystone State is in play now, it may not be for long once an impending Supreme Court decision is handed down.

Shortly, the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to announce whether the Affordable Care Act (also known as Obamacare) passes constitutional scrutiny. Most observers expect some or the entire act to be struck down. If this happens the electoral implications will be profound. In fact, striking down all or major portions of the health care law could reshape the ongoing presidential race in ways only now dimly perceived.

Exactly why this is so requires explanation and history provides it. Indeed, American history offers a compelling lesson: in analogous situations to the health care debate: the losing side in major court cases often becomes energized while the winning side often becomes complacent.

The nation’s long-running legal debate over abortion exemplifies this pattern, although it has existed as far back as antebellum Civil War times. Many of the transformative issues of American national life including prohibition, women’s suffrage and even slavery illustrate the principle.

Applying this lesson to health care means a Democratic loss in the Supreme Court could inject a powerful shot of adrenaline into a largely apathetic Democratic Party base. At the same time it would probably undercut the GOP enthusiasm that has been so massively mobilized by opposition to Obama’s health care plan.

The converse, while unlikely, is true also. If the Supreme Court does uphold Obama care, it will be Republicans who are energized, with consequences equally as significant for the 2012 election. States now comfortably in Obama’s column could become toss-ups overnight.

How can a single Supreme Court decision hold so much importance to an election? One way to answer this question is to examine the most recent Franklin & Marshall College Poll that asked Pennsylvania voters how they felt about Obama’s health care law.

Statewide, Pennsylvanians are actually divided somewhat evenly on Obama’s healthcare legislation, with about 46% in favor and 48% opposed. But this apparent divided opinion dissolves dramatically when one examines the data along party lines.

Rarely, if ever, is there greater polarization along party lines than exists on this issue. In Pennsylvania eight in ten Republicans oppose the Affordable Care Act, but only about two in ten Democrats do.

The sharp party polarization in Pennsylvania is roughly mirrored in national statistics. The Pew Research Center estimates that nationally 88% of Republicans disapprove of the law, while only 37% of Democrats disapprove.

Opposition to Obama care has been the GOP’s hot button issue in 2012. Consequently, if the Supreme Court scuttles it, the issue that has animated Republican voters more than any other will be mooted. Taking it off the table inevitably affects Republican turnout and support for Romney. How much is impossible to say. But by winning in the Supreme Court, some of the air goes out of the GOP electoral balloon.

Similarly it is impossible to know how much losing in the Supreme Court will motivate Democratic voters .The now relatively quiescent Democratic base, however, might respond vigorously. Certainly Democratic strategists will have newfound opportunity to castigate Republicans over issues that have been moribund since Obama care was passed, including uninsured voters and lifetime spending limits.

What this means for Pennsylvania is that a race now seen as more and more winnable for Republicans may instead shift decisively toward Obama and the Democrats. What it means nationally is that a tight race gets tighter still.

Winning on health care reform could cost Republicans the presidency, while losing could give Democrats another term in the White House. If it turns out this way, it won’t be the first time in American history that winning a legal battle lost a political war.

9 Responses

  1. This was a surprise for I was so unhappy with my last years pick. It slipped on perfect and I did not even know I had it on for it was so comfortable and warm until someone asked where I bought it!

  2. I’m still confused as to why it’s okay to have laws which require auto insurance but it’s not okay to have laws which require health insurance.

  3. @David Diano- those who would share the opinion that it was the gop’s fault for repealing it as opposed to the democrats fault for passing an unconstitutional mandate would agree with you.

    Then there is the subset who have no clue as to the implications of its implementation as opposed to the bold face lie of if you like your coverage you can keep it they were sold. Of course, now some have actually read the bill…which was a gift to insurers , not patients.

  4. Nigel, I’m going to go out on a limb here and call shenanigans on your comment – anyone who uses terms like “nanny state” and liberals to describe others would never have voted for Pres. Obama because he believed in his platform. So pretending that you voted for him and are disappointed in his policies is disingenuous or if you actually voted for him, then it seems rather unlikely that you understood the politics of 2008 (or did so as a protest vote, without any conviction for Pres. Obama). Pres. Obama campaigned on sweeping health care reform and talked about a public option in 2008, so either you couldn’t be bothered to actually know what the issues were or you’re implicitly lying now to give your comments some undeserved credibility as a disenchanted Obama voter.

  5. The guy fooled us to get elected. He fooled the Congress to pass an unconstitutional, massively expensive, Nanny-State law. The Supreme Court will blow it out. WE are fools if we elect this joker again, and deserve to go the way of Ireland, Greece, Italy and Spain. The spin on the loss of Obamacare begins. Even the liberals know it was way out of bounds. So they have to figure a way to turn this crushing defeat on the way for their Chosen-one into something good.

  6. I think the backlash to the GOP could be from people who would lose coverage (people with pre-existing conditions,, students on their parents, etc.)

  7. Agreed Blair, this is definitely a lose-lose for Obama. How can you be boosted by a branch of government delcaring your one supposed accomplishment to be illegal? It will merely feed into the narrative that Obama is incompetent and did not improve the nation of his watch. I just don’t see someone who isn’t already an Obama supporter being “mobilized” by it.

  8. Oh yes. Love the liberal logic. I love how an actual lose for Obama (overturning his most costly achievement at expense of the economy) is somehow a great thing for him. LOL. I love seeing the liberals spin their wheels in defense of Dear Leader.

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