Michael Tomasky: Democrats Should Come Out Swinging Against the Court.
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If the Supreme Court overturns the health-care law, Democrats will be
tempted to sulk and feel sorry for themselves. But that’s the last thing they
should do.
I expect, as I think most of us do, an unfriendly decision (from the
Democratic point of view) on the health-care law. Can’t yet say how unfriendly;
at the very least, an overturning of the individual mandate, and maybe more.
Assuming that’s correct, the question immediately becomes how the president and
the Democrats should respond. There’s very little they can do legislatively. But
I’ll be watching for rhetoric, tone, even body language. And on those counts,
they had damn well better dispense with the usual liberal woe-is-me
hand-wringing and shoulder slumping and come out swinging. They had better
communicate to their base that they stand for something, it’s important to them,
and they’re pissed. And if they do it the right way, they can make the Supreme
Court an issue this fall in a way that might even persuade some swing voters
that the court overstepped its bounds. I’d go so far as to say that an
aggressive response can reset and reframe the whole health-care debate, once
Americans have had their minds focused on this by a blatantly partisan
court.
Let’s say the court overturns the mandate by a
typical 5-4 vote, but leaves the rest of the law intact. What must the
Democrats do? The main thing is all about tone. I can just picture already what
I fear I will see: Obama coming out to a press conference with his head down,
speaking in a dour monotone, still trying to point out the silver linings but in
a way that sends the message to anyone listening that he’s really apologizing
for them, and muttering that he is now “calling on the Congress to act” (this
has become my least favorite Obama phrase) and get busy working on one of the
alternative approaches that will still keep the law alive—which is nothing more
than a punchline, really, because everybody knows Congress isn’t lifting a
finger.
No, a thousand times no! He needs to stand up there and get mad. The law may
be unpopular, but he and the Democrats are stuck with it, and being stuck with
it, they need to stick by it. Almost never before in American history has a
Supreme Court taken a law duly passed by the people’s representatives and in
just two years’ time invalidated it. If that isn’t legislating from the bench,
what is? Mr. Cool needs to get Hot. Against unanimous and ferocious opposition,
and in the face of blatant lies about what this bill would and would not do, he
and the Democrats came up with a way for people with cancer and diabetes and
what have you to get the treatment they need and not be either turned away or
gouged. He’s proud of that, he ought to say, and by God, he’s going to fight for
it. That provision of the law is wildly popular—85 percent supported that, in a
late-March New York Times survey. If you can’t play offense with 85 percent of the
people behind you, I give up.
He should also go right at Mitt Romney, on two points. First, Romney flatly
opposes coverage for all people with preexisting conditions. He backs care only
for those who have had “continuous coverage,” and not for people whose insurance
had lapsed at any point during their illness. So Romney is against
something 85 percent of Americans support. I am sadly confident that you did not
know that. Good work, Democrats.
Second:
when Romney was governor, he supported—insisted on—exactly the same provision
that the court will have just struck down. The people of Massachusetts were
forced to buy insurance. They live under that regime today, thanks to Governor
Romney. And guess what? They like it—62 percent approved of the law, in a poll
from earlier this year. And now, to please far-right interests
putting hundreds of millions of dollars into his campaign, he would deny the
people of the country the one good thing he did for the people of Massachusetts
as their governor.
Now we come to the court itself. Far be it from me to second-guess Jeff
Shesol, who wrote
in Newsweek that Obama should not take on the court. But a brand-new poll by Hart Research for the Alliance for Justice
suggests that with the right approach, the court can be made an issue. In the
case that I suggested at the top of this column—a 5-4 decision along the usual
lines—69 percent of Democrats and 57 percent of independents agreed that “they
would believe that the justices based their decisions more on their own
political views than on their interpretation of the law and Constitution.”
Fifty-seven is not an overwhelming majority. But it’s a majority nonetheless,
and if Democrats aren’t afraid to make this case strongly, they can turn it into
an even bigger one.
And finally: blow that stupid broccoli analogy out of the water. Need to know
how, Democrats? Here: read
me on it.
In sum, the Democrats should see an adverse decision as a chance to put the
other guys—the Republicans in Congress, Romney, and the court’s ideological
majority—on the defensive. It is what Republicans would do; they’d bay endlessly
about an “out of control” court and all the rest. It’s one of the key
psychological differences between conservatives and liberals. When conservatives
suffer a political setback, they prowl the terrain like lions, looking for a few
necks to bite. When liberals suffer one, they ball up like kittens and ask
themselves, “Oh, gee, what did we do wrong?”
That impulse, not any particular talking point, has been the whole problem on
this health-care debate to begin with. As it is on so many matters. Maybe John
Roberts and his little quartet of sea-green incorruptibles will finally get it
through their heads.

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