MoveOn.org has a new target, Governor Sam Brownback (R. KS):
http://www.wibw.com/...
A new billboard in the state capitol accuses Gov. Sam Brownback of denying insurance coverage to tens of thousands Kansans. The billboard reads: "Welcome to Kansas Where 77,000 people are denied health care because Gov. Brownback refuses to expand Medicaid There's no place like it!" It was paid for by the activist website MoveOn.org
It was installed at the intersection of 17th and Topeka Ave. on Tuesday and members of the organization were on hand the next morning to show it off.
"Accepting federal Medicaid funds is not only a smart economic move for our state, but ensuring that all Kansans have access to affordable health care is the right thing to do," said local organizer Dan Brennan.
According to MoveOn, up to 5 million Americans can't get affordable health care because over 20 states did not expand Medicaid. Under the Affordable Care Act, the federal government said it would cover 100% of the costs of the expansion through 2016 and most of the cost thereafter. - WIBW, 4/9/14
MoveOn.org is aiming to make Medicaid Expansion a top issue in the upcoming election and according to their polling, it will be a big issue:
http://kcur.org/...
The poll, conducted last week for MoveOn.org Political Action, a left-leaning group dedicated to “progressive change,” showed that 52 percent of Kansans favored expanding the health care program to more low-income adults.
Approximately a third – 35 percent – said they were opposed to Medicaid expansion and 13 percent said they weren’t sure. In addition, 41 percent of voters said Brownback’s failure to expand Medicaid would make them less likely to vote for him.
Public Policy Polling of Raleigh, N.C., conducted the survey, which also showed Democrat Paul Davis leading Republican incumbent Sam Brownback 45 percent to 41 percent with 14 percent undecided. - KCUR 89.3 FM, 4/9/14
And House Minority Leader Paul Davis (D. KS), who is going up against Brownback, has been on the right side of this issue from the beginning:
http://www.hayspost.com/...
The results from other states showed other GOP incumbents trailing Democratic challengers in part due to their opposition to expansion.
Burdett Loomis, a University of Kansas political scientist who briefly served on the staff of former Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, said that Brownback and Republican legislative leaders opposed to the Affordable Care Act have so far been able to “shut off any consideration of Medicaid expansion.”
Davis, the leader of the Democratic minority in the Kansas House, was a vocal supporter of expansion during the 2013 legislative session but has been less eager to discuss the issue since declaring his candidacy for governor, presumably due to its association with the Affordable Care Act, which remains unpopular with the public according to tracking polls by the Kaiser Family Foundation.
‘Better discussion’
The poll results, Loomis said, suggest that voters want to see both candidates address the issue more forthrightly during the campaign.
“We might be able to have a better discussion in the campaign about health care, not just Obamacare but Medicaid expansion,” Loomis said. “I think that discussion, which we should embrace in Kansas, has been long in coming.”
Mark Dugan, manager of Brownback’s re-election campaign, said the source of the survey made the results suspect.
“MoveOn.org is a liberal organization that paid for a poll by a liberal polling organization to promote the liberal candidate Paul Davis,” Dugan said. “Kansans don’t want to expand Obamacare.”
But support for expansion in the MoveOn.org poll was significantly weaker than that shown in two previous surveys.
Results of a poll done for the Kansas Hospital Association in February 2013 showed 60 percent support for expansion and a poll released in February of this year by the advocacy arm of the American Cancer Society put it at 72 percent.
Of the nearly 900 respondents in the MoveOn.org poll, 52 percent were Republicans, 30 percent Democrats and 18 percent independents. Most were between the ages of 46 and 65.
A review of polls conducted in the final weeks of the 2012 presidential race found those done by PPP to be the most accurate, though the firm was criticized in 2013 for withholding results in a Colorado recall election.
‘Manipulated data’
Noting the Colorado controversy, Dugan said PPP has “manipulated data in order to make their candidates or their liberal causes of the day seem better.”
More than 415,000 Kansans are now enrolled in Medicaid, which was renamed KanCare in 2013 when responsibility for managing the program was turned over to three for-profit companies. Most of the enrollees are children, pregnant women and Kansans with physical and developmental disabilities. A substantial number of seniors who have spent down their resources also rely on the program to cover their nursing home costs. - Hays Post, 4/9/14
It's understandable that Davis has to walk a careful line on the ACA in a state like Kansas but these poll results show that Medicaid Expansion is a political winner. If you want to donate and get involved with Davis' campaign, you can do so here:
http://davisforkansas.com/