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Politically vulnerable Democrats plan to back Obamacare repeal

House plans to vote Wednesday to repeal all or part of the final amount of Obamacare only the political arena, given, House Republicans has been made in 30 previous attempts to repeal laws, all of which have gone nowhere Democrat-controlled Senate. But this week's vote, and provides a number of politically vulnerable members to differentiate themselves on the hot issue of a new opportunity.
Wednesday before the vote, House Democrats have indicated that at least two majority of the Republican plan to reject part of the legal side. Are facing an uncertain re-election chances of winning.
For the first time publicly confirmed that he was the abolition of voting, North Carolina, Democratic Rep. Larry Kissel,
"I initially voted against it, I would vote to repeal," the first time he told the Charlotte Observers last week. kissell voted against the Health Act, by when it won in 2009 as a whole. In 2011, he did not vote to repeal.
kissell face a very difficult re-election of the eight districts, significantly more Republican this cycle, the redistricting changes. kissell no stranger to the trend line does not. He recently joined 16 fellow Democrats in the majority vote of their party in contempt of Congress held in Attorney General Eric Holder. kissell said he did not intend to agree with this year's presidential re-election.
Kissell, Democratic Rep. Mike McIntyre, also confirmed in North Carolina this week, he will vote repeal. MacIntyre's position is not surprising for several reasons: he is an only three Democrats to vote in January 2011, repeal, he said, more conservative constituency of District 7 of the cycle through the redistricting . McIntyre, Kissell, also refused to publicly support the president.
Two other Democratic Party in 2011, Rep. Dan Boren, Oklahoma State and Arkansas Rep. Mike Ross, retired, freeing them from the consequences of their vote to worrying Wednesday vote repeal. The other Democrats maintain a strong comprehensive motherboard supports the Democratic Party whip tight-lipped.
Wednesday's vote is to repeal laws in all of the direct response to t he last month, the Supreme Court's decision to adhere to the individual as the tax task.
Opinion polls show that there is no legal how much influence members of Congress to vote the repeal would have voted to repeal its integrity and suspect that the significant support.
ABC News / Washington Post poll released Tuesday (PDF) found that Americans average of minutes 47% to 47%, the laws in their support and oppose the Supreme Court's ruling. Only 18 percent of respondents said to support the full repeal.
-28-28% Of the respondents were divided into uniform, whether to support or oppose the congressional candidate of the backed up health care reform bill, they would be easier. Forty-one percent of respondents said the candidate's position will not make a difference.
However, regardless of immediate voter reaction, the candidate's opponent Wednesday's vote to provide real-time feed. Such as Kissell Democratic Party to win conservative support, is conscious, he is unlikely to win conservative votes, if the advertising and selling his Obamacare support through local airwaves exploded.
The Republican Party did not publicly expressed concern about the break up their party's members opposed to the repeal. In January 2011, the House of Representatives to vote Republican lawmakers supported the repeal of all laws.



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