WASHINGTON - On the eve of a House vote to repeal President Obama's health care overhaul, the administration has released a new analysis showing that up to 2.3 million Minnesotans could be denied health insurance due to pre-existing conditions if the law is overturned.
With Democrats forced to play defense on health care in the new Republican-led House, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius released the report Tuesday with Gov. Mark Dayton as part of a nationwide mobilization over the vote, which is expected Wednesday.
Repeal has practically no chance of getting through the Senate, yet the vote has prompted a full-scale public relations battle, with skirmishes likely to play out state by state. "Repeal would be catastrophic for the citizens of our state," said Dayton, who is seeking to expand Medicaid for an additional 95,000 Minnesotans and extend the deadline to apply for a $1 million health-exchange grant, which Sebelius suggested is in the works.
While Sebelius termed the repeal "political theater," Republican leaders say the vote is the first shot in what will be a prolonged campaign leading up to the 2012 presidential election and beyond. And while Democrats have sought to tighten the focus on specific benefits of the 2010 legislation, Republicans have framed the debate in broader, ideological terms.
"We can improve health care without orchestrating a government takeover," said Minnesota Republican John Kline, chairman of the House Education and the Workforce Committee and a close ally of Speaker John Boehner.
Staking out turf
Officially termed "Repealing the Job-killing Health Care Law Act," the bill is expected to pass easily with the help of a handful of conservative Democrats and virtually the entire GOP majority, including all four Minnesota Republicans.
"To be honest, if I came out here and voted not to repeal ObamaCare, there'd be a lot of people scratching their heads asking, 'Why did we send you to Congress?'" said freshman Rep. Chip Cravaack, R-Minn. He made the health care bill the centerpiece of his surprise victory over veteran DFLer Jim Oberstar. "I'm doing what the people of Minnesota or the Eighth District sent me out here to do."