Yeah but the bill itself was a compromise to make it pass. Sure shows Obama: no point in making concessions to those fools.
You asked what I meant by "door prizes;" I assume that's been adequately answered, so there's no need to follow up on quibbles about illustrative examples.
Keep viewing everything from the point of view of "who's worse, Democrats or Republicans?" and you'll never understand why Trump was elected. (That is to say, your understanding will be limited to "because tens of millions of people are stupid" which is no understanding at all).
Higher rents and lower wages have been actively supported or passively tolerated (who cares which?) by both parties for decades, and the people wielding power in both parties, being wealthy, have benefited. The latest uptick or downtick doesn't matter, especially when how you or your neighbor define unemployment and the cost of living is likely to differ from the government's own ever-changing definitions. That lower rents are available in places with no living-wage jobs (big help! big surprise!) or higher wages in places with ruinous rents don't matter either.
That rich Democrats cried all the way to the bank after being forced to compromise on health care reform with eeeeebil rich Republicans doesn't matter.
That's it's not even their particular fault, because ultimately it's all nearly-invetiable consequences of technological progress, doesn't matter. (There might have been a missed opportunity somewhere for society to channel the vastly increased industrial productivity into decreased work hours at proportionally higher pay, or to pass the increased profits proportionally along to the workers so that fewer industrial workers per household or per community would be needed, but given human nature can we really expect the management classes to have done other that what they did: use the decreased demand for workers as leverage for more work at lower pay while rubbing their hands and crooning "More profits for meeeeeeeeeee!"?)
It's very simple. When wages are too low and rents are too high, people revolt.
Yeah, the old joke: "The peasants are revolting." "They sure are!" (Updated by Hillary Clinton to include a basket and a different synonym for "revolting," but the original is still funnier.)
In this case the revolt has taken the very mildest form possible and still have it be noticed or recognized as such at all. So far. It's happened not only via completely legal participation in a completely routine election process, but even under the auspices of the established parties. (Though history suggests that even that very mild form of revolt can still have dangerous or even catastrophic consequences.)
If you don't want to see less mild and even more dangerous forms in the future, let's hope the 45th President of the U.S. becomes the most successful one to date.