Biden Campaign, Pelosi Take Aim At Trump’s Call To Repeal Obamacare
President Joe Biden's re-election campaign is leaning into President Donald Trump's pledge to overturn and replace the Affordable Care Act if voted back into the White House, enlisting former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to attack that stance.
Reuters:
Biden Campaign Taps Pelosi On Obamacare After Trump Threatens Health Law
President Joe Biden's re-election campaign enlisted former U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Tuesday to warn about threats to the Affordable Care Act (ACA), better known as Obamacare, after former President Donald Trump pledged new efforts to replace the law if he wins a second term. (Bose, 11/28)
Bloomberg:
Biden Campaign Attacks Trump’s Obamacare Threat With Help From Nancy Pelosi
Joe Biden’s campaign seized on Donald Trump’s call to overturn Obamacare, using it to cast the Republican as a threat to Americans’ health benefits ahead of a likely rematch with the president. “The former president reminded us that he is hellbent on destroying the Affordable Care Act,” former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Tuesday on a call organized by Biden’s campaign. “When he says he’s going after our health care, believe him because he’s done it before.” (Woodhouse and Korte, 11/28)
Stat:
Gottlieb, Trump FDA Chief, Questions GOP’s Health Strategy
One of the Republican Party’s most prominent health care thinkers doesn’t know what the GOP’s current health care strategy actually is. Former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said Tuesday evening that the party’s previous health care focus — on technocratic strategies like increasing competition in drug markets or supporting private Medicare plans — have largely fallen off platforms and out of stump speeches. (Florko, 11/28)
KFF Health News:
GOP Presidential Hopefuls Use Trump’s Covid Record To Court Vaccine Skeptics
Former President Donald Trump often seems proud to advertise his administration’s record on speedily developing covid-19 vaccines. On the campaign trail to win another term in the White House, though, he also has knocked the use of those very vaccines. In October, for example, he unleashed a barrage of social media attacks on Ron DeSantis’ pandemic record by reposting claims that the Florida governor — who is running against him in the Republican presidential primaries — was too active in vaccinating Sunshine State residents. In a further twist, Trump simultaneously circulated an MSNBC article suggesting DeSantis wasn’t vaccinating his constituents enough. (Tahir and Chang, 11/29)
Also —
The New York Times:
Americans Glimpse Jimmy Carter’s Frailty and His Resolve
His face was pale and gaunt, his legs were wrapped in a blanket, and his eyes never seemed to make contact with the family members huddled around him. But on Tuesday, Jimmy Carter was there, in the front row of a church in Atlanta, just a few feet from the coffin holding Rosalynn Carter, his wife of 77 years. Mr. Carter, 99, was some 164 miles from his home in Plains, Ga., where he had been in hospice care since February. He was brought into the church in a wheelchair, as the crowd of mourners at the memorial service looked on, many of them catching their first glimpse of him in nine months. (Rojas and Fortin, 11/28)
The Washington Post:
Carters’ Journey Reveals Tough Questions About When To Choose Hospice
The death of former first lady Rosalynn Carter on Sunday and the survival of her husband, former president Jimmy Carter, have exposed one of the most achingly difficult questions faced by people with life-threatening illness: when to choose hospice care. Rosalynn died only two days after entering hospice, the Medicare-supported program for people who have decided to relinquish attempts to overcome illness and focus on the quality of their remaining time. The 39th president made the same decision in February at the age of 98 and has outlasted the initial prediction of six months to live that is standard in hospice. (Bernstein and Keating, 11/24)