In specific we are deeply divided over the desirability of the Obama care health care plan. So despite the fact it was made law, the plan does not have widespread popular support among the electorate and the ongoing discussion is currently playing out through this budget debate and government shutdown.
Actually, this isn't true. Or anyway, its truth depends a great deal on how you word your polls. It seems that "Obamacare" has been so vilified that referring to it as such returns very different results than just asking people what they think of the legislation itself. And, heck, one of the most frequent problems people have with it is that it doesn't go far enough. Though of course you also get the idiots who are so unaware of how the government actually works that their problem is that they want the government out of their Medicare. Some people disapprove of government health care on principle, and they're entitled to that. But they should not, then, have anything to do with Medicare, either, and it bugs the bejeezus out of me that they don't seem to know that.
One of the reasons I care so passionately on this subject is that most of my friends are poor, or anyway most of my local friends. I've seen the practical effects of not having health care. None of my friends are in that odd group that has the money for insurance but doesn't bother because they obviously won't get sick. My friends have hubris, a lot of them, but not that specific kind of hubris. I have a friend with several serious untreated medical problems, including bipolar disorder worse than mine. I have a friend who was lucky that her gallbladder flared up a few days earlier rather than later, because she managed to get her surgery just a day or two before she lost her insurance. Graham doesn't have insurance, because he's out of the military now. But there's a new plan being offered for veterans which we're going to look into, because his problems didn't go away just because he was honorably discharged.
I am not trying to say, "It's the law of the land, so suck it up." I'm trying to say, "Don't play chicken like this; what are you, children?" As it happens, the law is popular enough so that servers have been flooded with people trying to get insurance from the new exchanges. If they do manage to pass a budget that defunds it, I'm not sure their obvious gerrymandering (have you
seen the shape of some of those districts?) will save them next November--because I think they'll be replaced by different Republican candidates in the primaries. We like returning our incumbents in this country; it's one of the reasons that I'm opposed to term limits, actually. But people do still have limits.