Beginning October 1, people will be able to shop for the expanded  insurance coverage made possible by ACA. As part of its publicity  effort, the Department of Health and Human Services is seeking to partner with the NFL and other sports leagues in publicity efforts. This does  not sit well with GOP Sens. Mitch McConnell and John Cornyn, who sent this letter to Commissioner Roger Goodell.
The letter chastises the league for risking its "inclusive and  apolitical" brand, expressing surprise that a pro sports league would  take "public sides in such a highly polarized public debate." But I  would reject the suggestion that the NFL, or any other sports league, is  or ever has been apolitical. Putting aside the way leagues regularly  engage in politics for their own direct benefit--antitrust, labor law,  stadium funding. Leagues and teams regularly get involved in public  issues--gay rights, women's rights, racial equality, war and the  military. At least some of these are at least as contentious as ACA. In  fact, as the letter acknowledges, the Boston Red Sox in 2007  participated in efforts to encourage enrollment in Massachusetts'  program. The reason for this being different, they argue, is that ACA  passed on a party-line vote using "legislative gimmicks" and "ridiculed  political favors." Stated differently, ACA passed through the ordinary  legislative process, but the process worked to our disadvantage. Thus,  the law is illegitimate, so you, as an apolitical entity, should stay  out of it. 
There also is a hint of the paranoid. They express concern for "the  Obama Administration's record of using the threat of policy retaliation  to solicit support for its policies or to silence its critics" and  helpfully tell the NFL to come to them if they are feeling threatened or  coerced so the Senate GOP can protect them from the big, bad President.  Of course, in emphasizing how unheard-of and wrong-headed the NFL's  involvement would be , the letter could be read as its own threat  designed to solicit support for the McConnell/Cornyn side in this  debate. It actually is the classic bully trick--you better come to me  for protection from that other who is threatening you.
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