The 2024 Democratic Party platform contains little emphasis on healthcare compared to previous years, despite it remaining a top concern for voters. The draft platform obtained by Politico in July does not mention a “public option” or “universal healthcare,” reverting from the party’s 2020 platform that had outlined reforms like a public insurance option. While the Biden administration has touted record-low uninsured rates and taken some steps to lower healthcare costs, such as capping insulin copays, overall healthcare affordability remains a major challenge. Premiums for employer-provided family plans continue to rise faster than wages and inflation, and over 40% of adults report having medical debt. The 2024 platform’s light treatment of healthcare is a disappointing shift from the more ambitious proposals of the past. Progressives who had pushed for policies like Medicare for All will need to mount a renewed effort to keep healthcare as a central priority for the Democratic Party. The party’s own rhetoric in 2020 about healthcare being a “right, not a privilege” must be upheld, and voters should demand that candidates put forth concrete plans to achieve truly universal, affordable healthcare coverage.

  • SteveFromMySpace@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 months ago

    “Ruthlessly” come on. People disagree sometimes. You’ll survive. It’s magic internet points.

    Spare me the flip flop BS. Vote for her or don’t, you know the deal.

    • paf0@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      No thanks. She’s a flip-flopper. The truth will not hurt you.

      Luckily for her the other candidate is a narcissist who tried to overturn an election, otherwise she would have no chance.