Wall Street Journal Celebrates House GOP's “Historic Repudiation” Of Health Care Reform

In a January 20 editorial, The Wall Street Journal called the House Republicans' vote to repeal the health care law a “historic repudiation” and stated: “Democrats are deriding last night's House vote to repeal ObamaCare as 'symbolic,' and it was, but that is not the same as meaningless. The stunning political reality is that a new entitlement that was supposed to be a landmark of liberal governance has been repudiated by a majority of one chamber of Congress only 10 months after it passed. This sort of thing never happens.”

From the WSJ editorial:

Democrats are deriding last night's House vote to repeal ObamaCare as “symbolic,” and it was, but that is not the same as meaningless. The stunning political reality is that a new entitlement that was supposed to be a landmark of liberal governance has been repudiated by a majority of one chamber of Congress only 10 months after it passed. This sort of thing never happens.

[...]

Republicans across the country campaigned on repeal last year, and yesterday's vote showed refreshing respect for the often invoked, rarely consulted American people. Meanwhile, six additional states have asked to join the momentous constitutional challenge to ObamaCare in Florida, bringing the total to 26, plus Virginia's separate suit. A majority of states resisting this mandate is another “symbolic” threshold.

[...]

The GOP does need to craft a reform alternative based on competition and market incentives that is more than a return to the status quo ante. And while “repeal and replace” can't happen as long as Mr. Obama wields veto power, yesterday's vote sent an important signal to voters that ObamaCare can't be fixed at the margins when it is so destructive at its core. Next up: defunding the law's implementation and repealing some of its more pernicious parts.