Gary North has
the best take that I have seen. This also, btw, is why Ted Cruz is making so much anti-Obamacare noise in the Democrat controlled Senate :
The House of Representatives is making a symbolic attempt to shut down
ObamaCare. The members know that they cannot get this through the
Senate. Obama would veto it even if they could.
Why are they doing this? Because they can. They can let the voters back
home know that they are taking a stand. They identify themselves as
anti-ObamaCare. They can run on this platform in November of 2014[...]
So, how long will House Republicans continue to take a stand? Until the polls indicate that they will lose in November 2014.
On October 1, enrollment in the exchanges is to begin. But hardly anyone
knows how to enroll yet. The computer programs are not ready. The
confusion has not yet hit. The sense of betrayal has not yet hit Obama’s
poll numbers.
If Republicans can hold out long enough for resentment against the
program to spread, they win politically. They can hold out longer. But
at some point, they will capitulate. That’s what the uncertainty is all
about. It’s about the timing of their capitulation. If they wait too
long, we could get a Democrat-controlled House in 2015. Pelosi would be
back in power. The Pelosi-Reid-Obama team would run the country for two
years. What might come out of that?
In November, both parties want to run on this slogan: “We told you so.”
The Democrats want to run on “We told you so about Republicans’
hostility to the middle class.” Republicans want to run on “We told you
so about how bad ObamaCare is.”
That’s what the House’s fight is really all about. They can make their
point before the government really does start cutting spending enough to
create backlash in November. Then they will decide that enough is
enough. They will vote for another continuing resolution.
The fight will be over how long the continuing resolution is for. From
the Republicans’ viewpoint, the shorter, the better. They will then get
to complain about ObamaCare every few months. The Democrats want a long
extension. That will be what the fight will boil down to. But the House
Republicans will capitulate.
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