In Massachusetts, 32% Consider State’s Health Care Reform a Success - Rasmussen Reports™
In 2006, Massachusetts implemented its own statewide version of health care reform and 32% of the state’s voters consider that reform a success. The latest Rasmussen Reports telephone survey of the Bay State finds that 36% consider the plan a failure and another 32% are not sure.
Those figures have changed little over the past two months.
Twenty percent (20%) now say that the state’s reform effort has made health care more affordable while 31% say just the opposite. Thirty-nine percent (39%) believe it’s had no impact on prices and 11% are not sure.
Sixteen percent (16%) say the Massachusetts reform has improved the quality of care in the state while 24% believe the quality of health care in the state has gotten worse. Most, 51%, say there has been no impact on the quality of care.
Two conclusions to draw from this survey: First, Mass voters skew heavily Democrat, but even so, they aren’t at all thrilled with socialized medicine - in their state, at least.
Second: Mass voters skew heavily Democrat, which means they are dumb enough to want, by a bare majority, to bend over and let Obamacare give it to them again - good and hard.
Democrats have always been suckers, though, so that’s not news.

