Mo. ballot to test federal health-care law


Associated Press

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.

More than 1 million people are expected to participate in what amounts to the largest-ever public-opinion poll on the nation’s new health care law.

Missouri on Tuesday will become the first state to the test the popularity of President Barack Obama’s top policy accomplishment with a statewide ballot proposal attempting to reject its core mandate that most Americans have health insurance.

The legal effect of Missouri’s measure is questionable, because federal laws generally supersede those in states. But its expected passage could send an ominous political message to Democrats seeking to hang on to their congressional majority in this year’s midterm elections.

The Missouri measure, shepherded to the ballot by Republican state lawmakers, is a glaring example of the twisting, troubled politics surrounding the health overhaul. After years of campaigning for health-care reform, Democrats finally accomplished it. Yet Democrats are largely silent, and it is Republicans who now are highlighting the health-care law in their campaigns.

From Florida to Washington and numerous states in between, Republican candidates for the U.S. Senate and House — and even for local offices that have little to do with the federal law — are calling for the repeal of what they derisively dub as “Obamacare.”

A year after raucous town-hall forums and months after Obama signed it into law, the health-care overhaul remains divisive. In the swing state of Missouri, where Obama narrowly lost to Republican Sen. John McCain in the 2008 presidential elections, the federal health-care law appears particularly unpopular.

Sixty-one percent of respondents to a Mason-Dixon poll conducted this month for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and TV station KMOV said they opposed the federal health- care law. Opinion generally split along party lines, but among the key category of independents, 65 percent said they disapproved.

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