Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
On Lawmakers' Plates: COVID Testing, Leadership Elections And A Side Of Lame Duck
The House of Representatives will return Monday to a post-election session with a few major but controversial items to address, including leadership elections, how to deal with more coronavirus relief and a must-pass spending bill. To help, they'll have a new, widespread testing program to track the coronavirus among members, staffers and workers. The plan is a first for any chamber of Congress eight months into the pandemic, and it comes as cases are spiking across the country and in Washington, D.C. (Grisales, 11/16)
Three members of the House's growing progressive wing will attend a strategy session Wednesday for聽left-leaning health care activists aimed at defining priorities under President-elect Joe Biden's administration. Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) and Katie Porter (D-Calif.) will join the聽Center for Health and Democracy's Wendell Potter聽to聽"chart the path forward on transforming our broken health care system," according to a tweet from Potter. (Bowden, 11/15)
Also 鈥
Republicans want to save Georgians from socialism. Democrats want to save their health care and flip the Senate. The dueling messages last week defined the kickoff of the two runoff elections in Georgia that will decide control of the Senate in January. Win both races, and Democrats have a 50-50 Senate with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris breaking ties. Lose both, and Democrats are relegated once again to the minority, with a Republican Senate standing in the way of President-elect Joe Biden鈥檚 ambitious agenda. (Arkin, 11/15)
The victories in state and local races have allowed GOP leaders to claim a mandate for their let-it-be approach to pandemic management, with pleas for 鈥減ersonal responsibility鈥 substituting government intervention. As hospitals fill and deaths climb, it鈥檚 a philosophy that public health experts warn could have disastrous consequences this winter. (Witte, 11/15)