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Lessons in implacability

Why it matters

By Luke Farmer Web Editor

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Published: Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Updated: Wednesday, February 3, 2010

President Obama was in New Hampshire on Tuesday; he was giving a speech about the new jobs bill he advocated in his State of the Union address. When he stopped to take questions, nearly every single one was about healthcare.

In that same State of the Union he reaffirmed his commitment to meaningful and lasting healthcare reform, but it was thought that he may be taking his foot off the gas in light of the histrionics from his own party due to recent events.

With the election of Scott Brown to the Senate late last month, it seemed for a little while as if healthcare was dead, but Obama has doubled down and the media and the American people haven’t forgotten about it.

In his speech, he called for the Republicans, if they insisted that a super majority (60 senators) was necessary to pass any bills at all, to start the process of governing rather than simply obstructing. Obama seems to be calling their bluff…or at the very least, forcing them to take unpopular stands.

While the short term seems to have benefited the hyper-conservative wing of the Republican party, a large percentage of democrats who voted in that Republican senator in Massachusetts did so because they thought healthcare was not progressive enough. The public option still has a 77 percent approval rating nation-wide, and the House bill is still a strong piece of healthcare reform legislation.

With these tools at hand, Obama has a chance to rescue healthcare legislation (and preferably not that train wreck of a senate bill). Democrats are usually known for snatching defeat from the jaws of victory, and while many in the party went into duck and cover mode in the last two months, there are some powerful voices, including Obama’s, that remember the massive majorities they hold in both houses of Congress.

Obama has changed a lot in politics so far, perhaps this time he’ll change his party’s decades-old habit of fumbling at the one-yard line as well.

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