Democrats wrestle with election-year message on health care
WASHINGTON — Ringed by a handful of cheering activist supporters, liberal House Democrats gathered outside the Capitol this week to announce they were forming a caucus to seek “Medicare for All” — shorthand for government-financed health care.
At the same time Thursday, Democratic senators were focused in a different direction. They were introducing a resolution aimed at rocking Republicans onto the defensive about Trump administration efforts to undermine former President Barack Obama’s health care law.
Don’t bet on either proposal going anywhere in the Republican-run House or Senate. But the deeper problem for Democrats is that the two messages —reinventing the nation’s health care system versus defending Obama’s popular statute— divide the party as it aims to win congressional control in this fall’s elections.
All Democrats oppose President Donald Trump’s repeated efforts to scuttle Obama’s Affordable Care Act, and many have backed expanding government-paid health care, including Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. But many also consider it a misstep to call campaign-season attention to Democratic efforts to restructure the country’s $3 trillion-a-year health care system.

