Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Medicaid Expansion, Cadillac Tax Among Health Law Buzz Words Heard On The Campaign Trail
Mr. Beebe, the popular Democratic governor who left office last year due to term limits, called the 2014 midterm elections 鈥渁 huge sea change鈥 and said Mrs. Clinton鈥檚 speech 鈥渞evitalizes a lot of folks.鈥 Despite the turn away from Democratic candidates in Arkansas, voters here have embraced some of the party鈥檚 policies including a minimum wage increase and a private-option health insurance program. 鈥淚 am well aware that here in Arkansas last year was a hard one for Democrats,鈥 Mrs. Clinton said. 鈥淏ut don鈥檛 forget, voters did come out and pass an increase in the minimum wage, Arkansas voters know pay checks need to grow.鈥 (Chozick, 7/19)
In her highly anticipated speech on the economy Monday, Hillary Clinton was heavy on rhetoric and short on specifics, promising to reveal her actual policy proposals in the weeks ahead. But this week, she also dropped a not-so-subtle hint about a big one. In a questionnaire for the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), which endorsed her this week, Clinton noted that the so-called 鈥淐adillac tax鈥 levied under Obamacare is one area she is 鈥渆xamining.鈥 (Vinik, 7/19)
Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush, who pursued an aggressive agenda when he was Florida鈥檚 governor for eight years, returns to the state capital on Monday where he plans to outline his top domestic priorities if elected. ... It鈥檚 not surprising that Bush would begin rolling out a series of policies even as the field for president continues to grow. Before he ran for president he constantly urged other Republicans to offer up alternatives to Democratic-backed ideas like President Barack Obama鈥檚 health care overhaul instead of just opposing them. (Fineout, 7/20)