For The First Time, Democrats Are Outspending Republicans On Obamacare Ads
Democrats have spent more than Republicans on Obamacare ads this cycle, a major shift from every other election since the health care law passed.
Since President Barack Obama signed the Affordable Care Act in 2010, Republicans have made repealing the law their mantra. They’ve fired up their base and put Democrats on the defensive by promising that once they had power, they would “repeal and replace.”
Republicans got their wish. In 2016, voters gave them control of the White House and both chambers of Congress. Yet their repeal attempts have failed, and the law has grown in popularity.
In response, Republicans are shying away from the law while Democrats are making it a core issue in their 2018 strategy.
Affordable Care Act supporters have spent $13,950,400 on pro-Obamacare ads this cycle (through June 30), just more than the $13,441,570 spent on anti-Obamacare ads.
It’s the first time total spending on pro-Obamacare ads has surpassed anti-Obamacare ads in an election cycle. The numbers were compiled by Kantar Media/CMAG for HuffPost.
Pro-Obamacare spending was significantly higher for the month of June, accounting for a major reason Democrats closed the gap: Last month, there were nearly $4 million in pro-Obamacare ads, compared with $1.1 million on the other side.
Before Obamacare passed, Democrats made health care their issue. For example, in the 2008 presidential election, the Obama campaign aired one specific ad on health care 24,000 times. But in 2012, when Obama was running for re-election, his campaign had just one health care ad.
Many of Democrats’ ads focus on going after GOP lawmakers for their plans to repeal the law.
Some Republicans in primaries who are trying to prove their conservative credentials have been hitting each other for not doing enough to repeal Obamacare. But beyond that, when Republicans do run ads on health care, they look more like what Gov. Scott Walker (R) is doing in Wisconsin, with a focus on the rising costs and how states can act.
Even though outright repeal appears to be off the table, there are still efforts to undermine the law. The big GOP tax bill eliminated the financial penalty for people who don’t get insurance. Without that penalty in place, healthy people are less likely to buy insurance, causing premiums for those who keep insurance to rise.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and other Democrats have been stressing health care as a central issue in the 2018 midterm elections.
Amanda Terkel
For The First Time, Democrats Are Outspending Republicans On Obamacare Ads