WASHINGTON — Democrats and Republicans agree on one thing about the hotly contested Affordable Care Act: When it comes to voter intensity, the GOP holds a clear upper hand.
But a trio of major liberal groups hopes to change that in coming months, with plans to spend tens of millions of dollars persuading residents in a dozen key states to vote for Democrats based on the issue. Whether they succeed could help determine not just control of the Senate but the fate of key governor’s races and the law’s viability.
The Service Employees International Union, Planned Parenthood Action Fund and MoveOn.org have each launched campaigns in recent weeks aimed at mobilizing support for both the law itself and those officials who back it. By focusing on more popular parts of the law — including Medicaid expansion, free birth-control coverage and a bar on denying coverage for pre-existing conditions — the groups hope to coax individuals who often skip voting in midterm elections to make it to the polls.
The advocacy groups say they are still honing specific plans but that the pieces are already in place. Tens of thousands of volunteers and campaign workers are already engaged, having spent the past few months dedicated to signing people up for insurance plans under state and federal health insurance exchanges.