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Friday, Nov 6 2015

Full Issue

Sanders Seeks To Regain Campain-Trail Momentum By Pushing Policy Initiatives

The Democratic candidate is looking at speeches that will likely include policy proposals on family and medical leave, a Medicare-for-all health care system and an expansion of Social Security benefits. The speeches are under consideration as Sen. Bernie Sanders is losing the battle for support among unions. Meanwhile, rival Hillary Clinton will meet with insurers. News outlets also report campaign trail news from Ben Carson and Jeb Bush, both candidates for the Republican presidential nomination.

Despite Sanders鈥 deep support for labor, the national nurses鈥 organization that Almada sought to join is the only major union to endorse Sanders in the race for the Democratic nomination for president. It is dwarfed by much larger labor groups that are lining up with his arguably less committed, less reliable rival, Hillary Rodham Clinton. National unions representing more than half of America鈥檚 14.6 million unionized workers are already in Clinton鈥檚 corner, and many of the rest are heading in that direction. It is creating significant tension in some of the organizations and raising the question of whether the Sanders campaign is faltering or if union leadership has lost touch with its rank and file, large numbers of whom are turning out to support Sanders with unrivaled enthusiasm. (Halper, 11/6)

Sanders鈥 campaign is considering a speech, possibly in New York, to provide more details on his economic policies, including how he would seek to structure tax rates to pay for his domestic policy agenda and seek to regulate Wall Street. Other topics he plans to address are how he would serve as commander-in-chief and a domestic policy agenda that will include proposals on family and medical leave, a Medicare-for-all health care system and an expansion of Social Security benefits. (Lerer and Thomas, 11/6)

Hillary Clinton is keeping her enemies close. Top campaign staffers are hosting insurance executives at Brooklyn headquarters this week, coming face-to-face with an industry that Clinton ranked among her top enemies during the first Democratic debate 鈥 alongside drug companies, the NRA, Iran and Republicans. (Norman and Pradhan, 11/5)

The doctor wore hospital scrubs and spoke directly to the camera. 鈥淟et us not be duped,鈥 Ben Carson said. It was 1992. Maryland voters were about to decide on a ballot measure proposing to loosen state restrictions on abortion. Abortion opponents had a powerful new ally: the daring neurosurgeon whose up-from-poverty story had made him a Baltimore hero. ... 鈥淎 humdinger,鈥 thought Frederica Mathewes-Green, an antiabortion activist. But then, after the ad had run for 10 days, a colleague called her to the office TV. 鈥淭here he was, standing behind the podium with their logo on it and saying that he didn鈥檛 know this would be a political ad,鈥 Mathewes-Green recalled. Carson was at a news conference, organized by abortion rights activists. He was denouncing his own ad. That episode was one of Carson鈥檚 first forays into politics, and it left both sides of the fight thoroughly bewildered. (Fahrenthold and Weigel, 11/5)

Jeb Bush is opening up about his daughter鈥檚 struggle with drug addiction. The former Florida governor has addressed the issue before, and he has discussed his own use of marijuana when he was young, but he spoke more emotionally about his daughter Noelle's addiction in an interview with The Huffington Post posted on Thursday. (Collins, 11/5)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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