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At a recent Republican dinner in New Hampshire, Romney vowed to repeal the federal health care law if elected president while saying individual states should be the incubators of new health care approaches. "Our approach was a state plan intended to address problems that were in many ways unique to Massachusetts," Romney said. "Our experiment wasn't perfect. Some things worked. Some didn't. And some things I'd change. "One thing I would never do is to usurp the constitutional power of states with a one-size-fits-all federal takeover," Romney said. While Democrats have been quick to congratulate Romney, his potential GOP challengers have pounced on the same issue. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee has said Romney should offer an apology for the Massachusetts law. "He has to say either 'I love it,' 'I hate it,' or, 'Hey I tried it, it didn't work and that's why I would say to you, let's not do it nationally,'" Huckabee said last month. "He's got to figure out how he wants to deal with it." One of the most contentious elements of a national law -- the so-called individual mandate that requires that nearly everyone has insurance or face penalties
-- was a key element of the Massachusetts law. Another Democrat, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley, who lost a special Senate election to Brown last year, pointed to Romney's support for the individual mandate in an amicus brief her office recently filed in the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to support the federal health care law. The brief quotes Romney's own words in defense of the individual mandate. "This personal responsibility principle means that individuals should not expect society to pay for their medical costs if they forego affordable health insurance options," Romney wrote in a letter accompanying the health care bill he would later sign. Romney's ongoing hesitation to fully embrace the law reflects the wider ambivalence among the American populace for the national health law. If sentiment toward the law warms as next year's election approaches, especially among key independent voters, Romney hesitancy to embrace the law may make him seem out of step with his own legacy. If voters stay cool, Romney's distance may help him. Whether the Democratic penchant for praising Romney backfires may ultimately depend on Romney himself, according to Paul Watanabe, a political science professor at the University of Massachusetts. "That strategy would have greater credence if Romney were embracing all the accolades that Obama and Patrick have been giving him," Watanabe said. "But he has been resisting. He's been attempting to divorce himself from it."
[Associated
Press;
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