PULL QUOTE:
Obamacare is the product of a brief moment of total Democratic dominance in Washington. Key
to that dominance was a 60-seat, filibuster-proof Senate majority. It
wasn't a sure bet for Democrats; despite victories in 2008, the party's
hopes for that majority depended on the defection of formerly Republican
Sen. Arlen Specter and the outcome of a contested race in Minnesota.
After a controversial recount, Al Franken became the 60th Democratic
senator on July 7, 2009, giving Democrats an unassailable edge.
After Obamacare passed the House on Nov. 7 -- over the opposition of 39 Democrats and all but one Republican -- Senate Democrats raced to get the job done. Threatening to keep the Senate in session through the holidays, they finally passed the bill -- 60 Democratic votes, not one to spare -- in the early hours of Christmas Eve.
Even as that vote was taken, a little-known Massachusetts Republican named Scott Brown was rising in the polls in the race for Kennedy's seat -- by promising to become the 41st vote against Obamacare. On Jan. 19, Brown's victory shocked the political world. When he was sworn in on Feb. 4, the second period of a Democratic filibuster-proof majority was over. It had lasted 134 days.
But that was long enough to pass Obamacare. Now, Obama is suffering the consequences of relying on just one party. When problems arose with his signature legislative achievement, he had no Republican support to help him out. None.
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