The Louisiana Democrat, despite
having an exceptionally
liberal voting record in her 17 years in office, has survived because she
began with a narrative that she was a moderate willing to buck her party on
important issues to the state and expanded it to an imagery that her experience
made her too effective for replacement. But (brace yourself in visualizing this
metaphor) the clothes are off the empress for many, beginning with her failure
to vote against the misnamed Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(“Obamacare’), which otherwise would have defeated it. As the latest
poll numbers from the Democrat-sympathetic Public Policy Polling shows, an
absolute majority of registered voters loath the law that already is pricing
many out of the insurance market, forcing them to change providers, encouraging
rationed and less convenient care, and making some pay for the leisure
activities of others.
As a result, the PPP summary
notes she has an absolute majority of respondents also disliking her, a number
that has continued to rise (and this trend perhaps explains why PPP had a gap
of just two months from the last polls of this contest, which ballooned nearly
to five months this time). In tandem, keeping in mind that the voting model
here by using registered voters disproportionately favor Democrat candidates
and is based upon presidential, not midterm, electorates that also favor
Democrats, support for her main challenger Republican Rep. Bill Cassidy has continued to rise as
has his name and party recognition. If not already, this trend threatens to
become irreversible.