Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Lawmakers, Headed Home For Recess, Braced To Face 'Dam-Bursting Levels' Of Activism
As Republican lawmakers prepare to leave Washington for a weeklong congressional recess, liberal groups and Democratic Party organizers are hoping to make their homecoming as noisy and uncomfortable as possible. But national organizers concede they are playing catch-up to a 鈥渄am-bursting level鈥 of grass-roots activism that has bubbled up from street protests and the small groups that have swelled into crowds outside local congressional offices. 聽(Zernike and Burns, 2/17)
Rep. Tom Reed (R., N.Y.) easily won re-election last year after being one of the first congressional Republicans to endorse President Donald Trump. On Saturday, he drew huge, often angry crowds in this small-town area as he tried to sell a Republican agenda that the president鈥檚 victory made possible. At a veterans hall and senior citizens center along New York鈥檚 Southern Tier region, Mr. Reed made his pitch for repealing the Affordable Care Act and explained why he had cast a committee vote against allowing members of the panel to review Mr. Trump鈥檚 tax returns. (Hughes, 2/18)
New York GOP Rep. Tom Reed probably knew what kind of day he was in for when he arrived at the Ashville senior center for his first town hall on Saturday. The crowd was so large the gathering had been moved outside to a slushy parking lot. "First and foremost, we are going to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act 鈥 Obamacare," Reed said at the outset, using a loudspeaker propped up on a ladder to try to reach the sprawling crowd. The response was loud and sustained boos. (Taylor, 2/19)
[Vicki Hopper] was among scores of people who gathered Monday across the street from the state Capitol in Atlanta to rally against Republican plans to repeal the ACA. The noon rally was part of the Save My Care Bus Tour, a two-month, cross-country effort to oppose repeal efforts. The tour is being led by the Alliance for Healthcare Security, a coalition of groups including Doctors for America and the Service Employees International Union, according to the Washington Post. (Miller, 2/20)
Republican lawmakers in Washington, who for years derided the measure as coercive and expensive for healthy individuals, are now balancing campaign promises to repeal the plan with potential blame for disruptions or loss in coverage if no replacement plan is enacted. While Georgia Republicans took a聽wait-and-see approach after Donald Trump was elected president,聽Democrats have focused on Medicaid. (Baruchman, 2/20)