The assertion by Attorney General William Barr that special counsel Robert Mueller found the Trump campaign did not conspire with the Russian government in 2016 removes, for now, a major focus of Democrats' messaging.
But it's also given them an opening to pivot to an issue they believe is more important to many voters anyway: health care.
In Democrats' eyes, the Trump administration handed them the perfect opportunity on Monday night. The administration filed in a Texas court case that would overturn the entirety of the Affordable Care Act.
Democrats feel they won the House in 2018 in large part because of a back-to- basics message that included protecting the ACA. The Trump administrations' efforts to overturn the law, including the expansion of Medicare, would jeopardize the health care for millions of Americans, Democrats say, and could drive voters away from Trump and Republicans in 2020.
Democrats were quick to pounce of the administration's filing in the Texas case. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee issued a statement asserting that "voters detest the GOP's never-ending efforts to jeopardize their health care, they don't believe the lies Republicans tell about their records when they get caught, and they'll hold every GOP Senate candidate accountable in 2020."
At a closed-door meeting of House Democrats on Tuesday, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said it was important for Democrats to "stay focused on our purpose for the people, lower health care costs, bigger pay checks and cleaner government," according to an aide in the room.
"We've just got to do the right thing. Stay focused on health care, rebuilding our country, raising people's wages. If we focus on that, we'll be alright," said Rep. Cheri Bustos, D-Ill., who is running the House Democrats' campaign operation for the 2020 elections.
In addition, despite the animosity over the Muller report, one area where Democrats believe they can work with President Trump is on lowering prescription drug prices — a rare issue both sides agree on. The topic has nonetheless eluded compromise for years.
A spokesman for Speaker Pelosi confirms there are early, staff-level talks with the White House on possible legislation to lower drug prices. The talks were first reported by Politico.
"We've been having some staff-level discussions with the Administration about lowering prescription drug prices, but they aren't negotiations," cautioned Pelosi spokesman Henry Connelly in a statement. "House Democrats promised the American people we'd take bold action to lower prescription drug prices, and that's what we're going to do."
Copyright 2019 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.