Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Biden's Budget Proposal Reinforces His Health Policy Priorities
The White House released its fiscal 2025 budget blueprint Monday, and its healthcare provisions are very much as President Joe Biden previewed them during his State of the Union address last week. The Health and Human Services Department budget request offers more detail about Biden's plans, including how his administration wants to respond to cyberattacks such as the one that has crippled UnitedHealth Group unit Change Healthcare for nearly three weeks. (McAuliff, 3/11)
President Joe Biden paid New Hampshire his first visit in nearly two years Monday, using a brief speech at the Goffstown YMCA to promote his $7.3 trillion proposed federal budget and criticize Republicans as obstructionists. (Rogers, 3/11)
President Biden was in the early stages of his interview with special counsel Robert Hur when the topic of Beau Biden came up 鈥 initially with Biden raising it and later as Biden was attempting to get his chronological bearings and wondered aloud when, exactly, it was that his son died. 鈥淲hat month did Beau die? Oh God, May 30,鈥 he said, naming the correct day, according to a transcript of the exchange reviewed by The Washington Post. Two others in the room chime in with the year, and Biden questions again, 鈥淲as it 2015 when he died?鈥 Not long after the exchange, Hur suggested they consider taking a brief break. 鈥淣o,鈥 Biden responds, before launching into a long explanation of Beau鈥檚 death and its impact on him deciding not to run for president in 2016. 鈥淟et me just keep going to get it done.鈥 (Viser, 3/24)
On homelessness 鈥
Housing and Urban Development Secretary Marcia L. Fudge will step down from her role in the Biden administration this month, she announced Monday, saying she had 鈥渕ixed emotions鈥 about leaving an agency that serves those most frequently left behind. ...In a statement, President Biden praised Fudge as someone whose 鈥渢ransformational leadership鈥 led to lower housing costs and increased housing supply, with more housing units under construction now than at any time in the past 50 years. (Wang, 3/11)
麻豆女优 Health News: California Voters Are Skeptical That More Money Is The Answer To Homelessness
California Gov. Gavin Newsom鈥檚 expensive ballot-box attempt to tackle the mental health and addiction crisis on the state鈥檚 streets is leading by a razor-thin margin, a week after the March 5 election. The close vote reflects growing skepticism among voters that he can effectively address the state鈥檚 homelessness epidemic. Proposition 1 would fund thousands of new housing units and treatment beds with a $6.4 billion bond and by redirecting $3 to $4 billion in existing mental health tax revenue. (Hart, 3/12)