Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Trump Unharmed As FBI Investigates Another Assassination Attempt
The FBI is investigating what it said is an apparent assassination attempt on Donald Trump at his Florida golf club Sunday, the second time in two months there鈥檚 been an apparent attempt on the former president鈥檚 life. Trump is safe and was not harmed in the incident, his campaign said. Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw said during a Sunday news conference that his office was informed at 1:30 p.m. ET of shots fired by the Secret Service, when agents fired at a man who had a rifle in the bushes along the perimeter of the Trump International Golf Club. Trump had been playing golf at the time, moving between holes five and six, a source briefed on the matter told CNN. (Holmes, Miller, Sullivan, Perez and Herb, 9/16)
Authorities said they recovered the rifle that a gunman pointed into a Florida golf course where Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump was playing Sunday. Unlike in the assassination attempt against Trump in July, and in many of the mass shootings that have plagued the country in recent years, authorities believe the suspected gunman did not use an AR-style rifle. The weapon recovered by authorities was identified by the Palm Beach County Sheriff鈥檚 Office as an 鈥淎K-47-style rifle鈥 equipped with a scope. However, a firearms expert told The Washington Post the gun more closely resembled an SKS-type rifle. (Wu and Kelly, 9/15)
In news about the presidential election 鈥
Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio), the Republican nominee for vice president, said 鈥渙f course鈥 former President Trump has a plan to 鈥渇ix American health care鈥 in a Sunday interview and also outlined several benchmarks of a health care framework. 鈥淗e, of course, does have a plan for how to fix American health care, but a lot of it comes down Kristen to deregulating the insurance market so that people can choose a plan that actually makes sense for them,鈥 Vance told NBC News鈥檚 Kristen Welker on 鈥淢eet the Press鈥 on Sunday when asked for specifics about the former president鈥檚 health care plan. (Fortinsky, 9/15)
Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance expressed support for expanding veterans' ability to use private doctors in a podcast interview this week. During an appearance on the Shawn Ryan Show released Wednesday, Vance was asked by the host, a former Navy SEAL who said he stopped using the Department of Veterans Affairs after one try, whether he would consider privatizing veterans' health care. "I think I'd consider it," replied Vance, a former enlisted Marine who deployed to Iraq in a public affairs role. (Kheel, 9/13)
It was 2016, and California prosecutors were mulling an audacious bid to shut down the internet鈥檚 most popular clearinghouse for sex-related services. Their boss, Kamala Harris, pressed her deputies to aggressively prosecute the founders of the website, Backpage.com. Her office brought the first-ever criminal charges targeting the site, and the case came to exemplify Harris鈥 tough-on-crime reputation as state attorney general. (Gerstein and Demko, 9/15)
Ana Ilarraza-Blackburn becomes animated when talking about how immigrant communities are thrust into the state and national spotlight during election years. Her voice grows louder, its cadence quickens and she unleashes an impassioned assessment about the negative health impact that political rhetoric can have on immigrant communities 鈥 especially those that are predominantly Hispanic. (Blythe, 9/16)