Chart: GOP Votes on Healthcare Versus Jobs Legislation

Chart: GOP Votes on Healthcare Versus Jobs Legislation

Chart: GOP Votes on Healthcare Versus Jobs Legislation

The GOP refuses to vote on meaningful legislation. 

Copy Link
Facebook
X (Twitter)
Bluesky
Pocket
Email

House Republicans are set to vote down President Obama’s healthcare law for the thirty-third time, although it is the first repeal vote since the Supreme Court upheld most of the law as constitutional.

The GOP’s constant reiteration of its opposition to the president’s largest domestic achievement has reduced legislating to message discipline—and the political class continues to debate the wisdom of this strategy.

But whether or not this is “smart political theater,” the Republicans’ eagerness to clog Congress with symbolic votes is a sharp contrast to all the jobs legislation that they have bottled up. Remember when President Obama pushed hard for a massive jobs and stimulus plan, the American Jobs Act, which would inject over $400 billion into the economy? The program was even “tilted heavily toward the Republican prescription of tax cuts,” as Bloomberg reported, in order to draw support.  The president went all out for the plan in an address to a joint session of Congress. A majority even backed the Jobs Act in the Senate, but Republicans filibustered, and in the House, they never even scheduled a floor vote for the bill:

In fact, as the above chart explains, Republicans sent Obama’s jobs proposals to eleven different committees but never bothered to vote on it. The bill’s history on the Library of Congress website reads like a sad series of hand-me-downs.

Other jobs bills, like Representative Rosa DeLauro’s Layoff Prevention Act, which would simply tweak the tax code so that employers had more flexibility to cut workers’ hours instead of terminating them—and only within selected “short-time compensation programs”—have never gotten a committee vote. Nevermind the floor debate. These are the kind of jobs measures that Congress should be debating, not the optics of deliberate redundancy.

But still, asking whether Republicans look good by attacking healthcare again is the wrong question. By stoking another healthcare debate, even for a failed vote after a court loss, they are distracting people from the relentless GOP obstruction on economic recovery. And if there’s no jobs plan, of course, it’s easier for their nominee to keep asking where the jobs are.

Time is running out to have your gift matched 

In this time of unrelenting, often unprecedented cruelty and lawlessness, I’m grateful for Nation readers like you. 

So many of you have taken to the streets, organized in your neighborhood and with your union, and showed up at the ballot box to vote for progressive candidates. You’re proving that it is possible—to paraphrase the legendary Patti Smith—to redeem the work of the fools running our government.

And as we head into 2026, I promise that The Nation will fight like never before for justice, humanity, and dignity in these United States. 

At a time when most news organizations are either cutting budgets or cozying up to Trump by bringing in right-wing propagandists, The Nation’s writers, editors, copy editors, fact-checkers, and illustrators confront head-on the administration’s deadly abuses of power, blatant corruption, and deconstruction of both government and civil society. 

We couldn’t do this crucial work without you.

Through the end of the year, a generous donor is matching all donations to The Nation’s independent journalism up to $75,000. But the end of the year is now only days away. 

Time is running out to have your gift doubled. Don’t wait—donate now to ensure that our newsroom has the full $150,000 to start the new year. 

Another world really is possible. Together, we can and will win it!

Love and Solidarity,

John Nichols 

Executive Editor, The Nation

Ad Policy
x