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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Tuesday, Oct 20 2020

Full Issue

Democrats, Hoping For Election Sweep, Eye Big Increases In Health Spending

Although supports have pent-up demand for many projects, health care is among the top issues that Democrats say they will seek to reinforce if they take the White House and the Senate in the Nov. 3 election. Political coverage also includes reports on inaccuracies in Trump's stump speeches, social media ads on insulin pricing and a California initiative on contract workers.

Democrats are eyeing aggressive budget and spending plans if they sweep in November, aiming to deploy every fiscal tool at their disposal to deliver major investments in infrastructure, clean energy, child care and more. ... It鈥檚 also possible that Democrats would turn to reconciliation for a massive health care expansion if the Supreme Court strikes down the Affordable Care Act, said Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.), a senior appropriator. ... Democratic leaders have signaled their first priority would be another multi-trillion-dollar coronavirus relief package if Congress and the Trump administration can鈥檛 reach a deal by early next year. (Emma, 10/19)

According to President Donald Trump鈥檚 storyline, Joe Biden and his allies want to ban or destroy many things that matter to Americans, like health care protections, the Second Amendment and churches. ... As part of our 2020 election coverage, PolitiFact has been monitoring and fact-checking Trump鈥檚 claims like these on Twitter, at campaign rallies, at White House events and during media interviews. And we鈥檝e noticed a pattern: His claims about things Biden and Democrats want to eliminate are routinely inaccurate, misleading, oversimplified or exaggerated. (We鈥檝e also been fact-checking Biden.) Here鈥檚 a rundown of more than a dozen things Trump commonly 鈥 and falsely 鈥 says Biden wants to ban, abolish or destroy, along with the facts. (Valverde, 10/19)

In other election news 鈥

The crowd at a Trump campaign rally in Arizona erupted into chants of "Superman" on Monday after President Trump recounted feeling like the superhero upon聽recovering from his coronavirus diagnosis. "People are pandemic'd-out. You know that? They're pandemic'd-out. That's why it's so great what your governor has done. He's opened up your state," Trump said at the rally. "I'm here. And now I'm immune. I can jump into this audience and kiss every man and woman. I'm immune." (Seipel, 10/19)

KHN and Politifact: Progressive Group Highlights Trump, Tillis Weakness On Insulin Price Tags聽

During the first presidential debate of 2020, President Donald Trump touted his efforts to curb skyrocketing drug prices and declared that insulin is now 鈥渟o cheap, it鈥檚 like water.鈥 The response on social media was swift, and divided, with some people sharing pharmacy bills showing thousands of dollars they鈥檇 spent on insulin, while others boasted of newfound savings. The next day, a self-described progressive political action committee called Change Now jumped into the fray by releasing an ad that circulated on Facebook attacking Trump and Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) on this issue. (Pattani, 10/20)

This year鈥檚 elections feature old and new issues that are breaking spending records. It鈥檚 fair to say that each candidate and measure this election will affect the food world at individual and industry levels.聽Some statewide propositions in particular, like Proposition 22, California鈥檚 costliest ballot campaign to date at nearly $190 million ... spent, explicitly affect the food industry. If it passes, Proposition 22 would exempt companies from classifying their labor force including delivery drivers and grocery shoppers as employees and instead leave them as contractors. (Gebreyesus, 10/16)

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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