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"Care" is a word that carries positive connotations. So Jamieson says the Obama campaign can now work on directly equating his health care law with Medicare. Denounced as a stepping stone to socialism when it was being debated in Congress, the health insurance program for seniors and disabled people is now considered politically unassailable. Cutter says it will also help Obama draw a contrast between his approach to health care and Republican plans, including the House budget proposal that calls for converting Medicare for future retirees into a system dominated by private insurance plans. In the official name of the law, the word "care" was somewhat overshadowed. Congress named it the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, or PPACA. Some lawmakers still refer to it by that acronym, pronouncing it pea-pah-cah. Supporters have preferred to call it the Affordable Care Act, or ACA for short. But "ACA" doesn't convey anything about caring. Campaign officials say there wasn't much discussion about embracing Obamacare. The president tested the approach at fundraisers. Then campaign manager Jim Messina emailed supporters: "Happy birthday Obamacare ... make sure your friends and family know that Obamacare is something to proud of
-- and worth fighting for."
Last year, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., tried to block lawmakers from uttering the term "Obamacare" on the House floor. Now the Obama campaign is selling "I Like Obamacare" T-shirts. No matter which way the Supreme Court rules, they could become the next collector's item for political junkies.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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