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She was elected in 2011 to her first political position – Florida attorney general – and was the first woman to hold that office. “Knowing her as a trial attorney and the attorney general,” Colton told CNN, “I feel that she would be very qualified for this job.”Dave Aronberg, a Palm Beach County state attorney who worked for Bondi when she was attorney general in Florida, told CNN that while Bondi will carry out Trump policies loyally, she is likely to treat Justice Department employees fairly. And for Trump’s opponents, Aronberg said not to expect a better pick for attorney general. “Pam Bondi is the best attorney general that Donald Trump is going to nominate,” Aronberg said. Since leaving the Florida attorney general post in 2019, Bondi has worked Ballard Partners, a lobbying firm with deep ties to Trump and his incoming chief of staff Susie Wiles.
Persons: Donald Trump, Pam Bondi, Matt Gaetz, Trump, Bondi, Gaetz, Trump’s, Todd Blanche, , Dwight Gooden, , Nick Cox –, University of South Florida –, ” Cox, , Bruce Colton, ” Colton, ” Dave Aronberg, ” Aronberg, Aronberg, John Durham, “ Pam Bondi, Barack Obama’s, Joan Biskupic, John Roberts, Obama, Rick Scott, Ballard, Susie Wiles, baselessly, Joe Biden, Hunter Organizations: CNN, Trump, US Justice Department, Republicans, Justice Department, DOJ, Department of Justice, New York Mets, University of South, , Bondi, Obamacare, Reuters, Trump University, Ballard Partners, Foreign, Amazon, General Motors, Uber, Republican National Convention, White, Center, Litigation, Trump America, Policy Institute, Trump – Locations: Florida, Bondi, , University of South Florida, Beach County, Russia, Washington, Qatar, Pennsylvania
Andrew Harnik | Getty ImagesPresident-elect Donald Trump's return to the White House is poised to have big impacts on consumer health care. CMS, in turn, administers the Affordable Care Act marketplace and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), among other endeavors. A spokesperson for Trump's transition team did not respond to a request from CNBC for comment about the President-elect's health policy plans. Still, it's a 'big' gamble to forgo health insurance Around 3.8 million people will lose their health insurance if the subsidies expire, the Congressional Budget Office estimates. Short-term health insurance plans offer coverage for limited amounts of time, and typically on fewer medical services than comprehensive coverage.
Persons: Donald Trump, Andrew Harnik, Donald Trump's, Michael Sparer, Sparer, Trump, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Kennedy, who's, Mario Tama, Cynthia Cox, I'd, Cox, Sabrina Corlette, Georgetown University's, Corlette, Carolyn McClanahan, Larry Levitt, Levitt, enrollee, they're, Yasin Ozturk, Biden, It's, Organizations: Base Andrews, Getty, Affordable, Trump, Republican, Columbia University, of Health Policy, Management, of Health, Human Services, Medicare, Services, CMS, Children's Health Insurance, Washington Post, The Washington Post, CNBC, Providence St, Mary Medical Center, Finance, American, ACA, Cox, Congressional, Office, Republicans, Center, Health, Georgetown, Georgetown University's McCourt School of Public, Planning Partners, Medicaid, Social Security, Maskot, of Columbia, U.S, Capitol, Washington , D.C, Anadolu Agency, GOP, Corlette, pharma, Centers Locations: Base Andrews , Maryland, U.S, Duluth, Apple Valley , California, Jacksonville , Florida, Washington ,
Trump said he plans to change the Affordable Care Act, which provides healthcare for 45 million Americans. AdvertisementDonald Trump's return to the Oval Office could mean changes to Americans' healthcare coverage, based on his previous comments and actions while president. AdvertisementAs president, he will also have the power to influence America's healthcare landscape, including insurance coverage, drug price negotiations, government health and safety regulations, and reproductive healthcare access. Any changes to Medicaid and Medicare under Trump could also cause those with ACA insurance see a reduction in their care options. This could mean some Americans on ACA plans could face higher out-of-pocket costs and fewer in-network care options.
Persons: Trump, Donald Trump's, Barack Obama, Ji, Joe Biden's, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Kennedy, Karoline Leavitt, Vance Organizations: Affordable, ACA, of Health, Human Services, Congressional, Office, Business, Trump, Georgetown University, DC, Insurance, Department of Health, Congress, Republican, House
Here are seven ways a Trump administration could affect your personal finances. During Trump’s first term, the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act temporarily expanded the child tax credit from $1,000 to $2,000. “He will deliver.”TaxesThe Trump administration is expected to focus on extending tax cuts introduced by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act that are set to expire in 2025. The Trump administration wants to “promote choice and competition” and make health care more affordable, according to his policy platform. The Trump administration will likely cut red tape to encourage business and real estate developments.
Persons: Donald Trump, he’d, Trump, JD Vance, Maria Castillo Dominguez, , Karoline Leavitt, Vance, , ” Leavitt, Alan Auerbach, Social Security Trump, Biden, Berkeley’s Auerbach, Joe Biden’s, ” Auerbach, “ They’re, , Trump’s, Auerbach, Sarah Lueck, ” Trump Organizations: CNN, Social Security, Jobs, Valoria Wealth Management, Trump, Urban, Brookings Tax, Tax, UC Berkeley, Center, enrollees, Republicans, Public, Consumer, National Retail Federation, Health, Republican, Center for Budget, Medicare, it’s, Housing
Millions of Americans risk losing subsidies next year that help them pay for health insurance following President-elect Donald Trump’s election win and Republicans’ victory in the Senate. Even Democratic control of the House likely won’t save the subsidies, he added. As of Thursday afternoon, House Republicans had won 209 seats, just nine short of the majority, according to an NBC News tracker. In 2024, more than 20 million people got health insurance through the ACA, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “This means fewer people will know their rights under the law and many will not sign up for ACA health care plans.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, , Trump, Chris Meekins, Raymond James, , , Meekins, Cynthia Cox, Cox, ” Cox, Lawrence Gostin, ” Gostin, Gostin Organizations: Republicans ’, Senate, American, Republicans, White House, GOP, HHS, NBC, Centers, Medicare, Services, Congressional, Trump, CBO, Congress, O’Neill Institute for National, Global Health Law, Georgetown University, ACA Locations: Southern, KFF
Stocks may be in rally mode after former President Donald Trump's election victory, but not every sector is poised to get a lift. Clean energy One potential big loser is solar and clean energy stocks that benefited from tax credits instituted under President Joe Biden 's Inflation Reduction Act. Retailers Along with changes to clean energy, Trump has hinted at tariffs to buoy U.S. producers. The firm also highlighted companies with greater than 20% China exposure, including Crocs and American Eagle Outfitters , as being among potential tariff losers. STZ 1D mountain Constellation Brands falls amid Trump tariff concerns "With a 50% American whiskey tariff, we would expect BFB to pass some cost along to the consumer, which would put additional pressure on volumes," he wrote.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, Trump, Goldman Sachs, Brian Lee, Lee, Melanie Nuñez, Cowen's Robert Moskow, Brown, Forman, Bank of America's Joanna Gajuk, Gajuk, bode, Andrew Mok Organizations: NBC News, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Technologies, Enphase Energy, Bank of America, American Eagle Outfitters, Constellation Brands, Diageo, EU, Consumer, . Hospital, Republican, Bank of America's, Ardent Health Partners, Universal Health Services, HCA Holdings, Barclays Locations: financials, U.S, China, Scotch, Mexico
BTIG's list of biggest Trump winners and losers
  + stars: | 2024-11-06 | by ( Michelle Fox | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +4 min
In addition, he has floated plans to reduce corporate tax rates to as low as 15% from 21%, and eliminate income tax on tips, Social Security and overtime pay. Those include reduced individual income tax rates and increased alternative minimum tax (AMT) exemption amounts. These stocks are among those BTIG sees as the biggest winners and losers from Trump's victory. Winners M & A and consolidation A Trump presidency likely means a more supportive environment for corporate consolidation, Boltansky said. That would be positive for names like HealthEquity, which BTIG rates a buy, and Webster Financial , he noted.
Persons: Donald Trump, BTIG, Isaac Boltansky, Trump, Boltansky, CoreCivic, MicroStrategy, Webster Organizations: White, ACA, Social Security, Trump, Discover Financial, Discover, Republican White, Geo, United States Marshals Service, Federal Bureau of Prisons, Geo Group, Webster Financial, HealthEquity, Everest Group Locations: United States, China
WASHINGTON — Americans are poised to elect a new Congress, with control of both chambers at stake as every seat in the House of Representatives and one-third of the Senate is up before voters on Election Day. Republicans favored to win the SenateIn the Senate, Democrats currently have a 51-49 edge, but Republicans are favored to capture the majority. They’re all but guaranteed to win an open seat in ruby-red West Virginia, with Democrat-turned-independent Sen. Joe Manchin retiring. If Harris wins, Republicans will need one more seat in addition to West Virginia to capture the Senate. In New York, Republicans are defending four seats they flipped in 2022, propelling them to win the House majority.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Sen, Joe Manchin, JD Vance, Harris, Democratic Sens, Jon Tester, Sherrod Brown, Trump, Tim Sheehy, Bernie Moreno, Bob Casey, Debbie Stabenow, Tammy Baldwin, Krysten Sinema, Jacky Rosen, , Ted Cruz, Rick Scott, Dan Osborn, Republican Sen, Deb Fischer, Cook, Marc Molinaro, Mike Lawler, Anthony D’Esposito, Brandon Williams, D’Esposito’s, Williams, Laura Gillen, John Mannion, , Pat Ryan, Republican Alison Esposito, John Duarte, Adam Gray, David Valadao, Rudy Salas, Mike Garcia, Democrat George Whitesides, Ken Calvert, Will Rollins, Michelle Steel, Derek Tran, Mike Johnson, Hakeem Jeffries, Suzan DelBene, We’ve, ” DelBene, Joe Biden, Kevin McCarthy, Johnson, ” Johnson Organizations: Senate, Democrats, Democrat, GOP, Trump, Democratic, Republican, Republicans, Rep, House Democratic, , NBC News, Treasury Department, White House, Congress, Affordable Locations: WASHINGTON, West Virginia, R, Ohio, Montana and Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona, Nevada, Texas, Florida, Nebraska, New York, California, Hudson, D, Pennsylvania , Michigan, Arizona , Nevada, Pacific
And the next president — Donald Trump or Kamala Harris — along with the new Congress will set the agenda. Here are four big things the 119th Congress will have to tackle. Trump tax cuts worth trillions of dollars are expiring after 2025Major portions of Trump’s 2017 tax law totaling $3.3 trillion will expire at the end of 2025. Former President Trump has said he wants to fully extend the expiring tax breaks across all income levels and pursue deeper tax cuts. If it lapses, many Americans would see spikes in their insurance premiums, which may put pressure on Congress to act.
Persons: — Donald Trump, Kamala Harris —, Trump, Harris, Barack Obama, There'll Organizations: WASHINGTON, Trump, Republicans, Democratic, Affordable, Congressional, Office, Treasury Department, U.S, Republican Locations: California, New York
The DOJ and FBI are preparing to combat election lies but have limited authority. Affordable Care Act coverage is available for DACA recipients for the first time. For the DOJ that means setting up an Election Threats Task force, focusing on the prosecutions of people who threaten election officials. To understand how that might play out, NBC News interviewed current and former Justice Department and FBI officials, as well as legal experts. For many DACA recipients who are unable to get job-based health insurance, a lack of access to government-funded programs meant their insurance options were limited or too expensive.
Persons: Donald Trump, , , , Trump, don’t, Read, Helene, Milton, Sarahi, Young Thug, Georgia’s, Sean “ Diddy ” Combs, Nicole MacDonald, isn’t, Biden, they’d, — Rich Bellis, Elizabeth Robinson Organizations: DOJ, FBI, Affordable, Trump, Justice Department, NBC News, Boeing, of Labor Statistics ’, University of Washington, Republican, Atlanta, NFL, NBC Locations: U.S, Swedish
That changed Friday, when tens of thousands of DACA recipients became able to sign up for health insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act for the first time. Bortolleto said she plans to sign up government-funded health insurance as early as Friday. The limited options, she said, mean many DACA recipients can’t get quality health insurance, resulting in high uninsured rates. The lawsuit says that expanding coverage to DACA recipients will create additional “resource burdens” and harm to taxpayers. She and other DACA recipients have asked the court to allow them to join the Kansas case, siding with the defense.
Persons: Camila Bortolleto, Camila, Bortolleto, ” Bortolleto, , Barack Obama, Drishti Pillai, Pillai, can’t, ” Pillai, Donald Trump, Arthur Caplan, , ” Caplan, “ They’re, Kris Kobach, Biden, ” Juliana Macedo, Nascimento, Trump, Macedo, Quezada, ” Quezada, she’ll Organizations: Affordable, Biden, National Immigration Law Center, Children’s Health Insurance, NYU Langone Medical, University of Washington, Republican Locations: Brazil, Connecticut, U.S, Kansas, North Dakota, New York City, Maryland, Mexico
And it’s particularly notable after the Republican party’s high-profile failure to repeal key parts of the health care law during Trump’s first term in office. “Health care reform is going to be a big part of the agenda,” Johnson said at the event. And he said it wouldn’t just be health care getting a massive “free market” overhaul. “We know they’ll do it because I’m convinced that if Roe v. Wade can fall, then anything can fall.”The once-contentious health care law has not been a major theme of the 2024 campaign. Taking a different tact than his previous campaigns, Trump himself has stressed to voters that he wouldn’t eliminate the health care law.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Donald Trump, Johnson, Vance, , Trump’s, ” Johnson, Ryan Mackenzie, Susan Wild, Sen, John McCain, Hakeem Jeffries, , ” Jeffries, I’m, Roe, Wade, There’s, Trump, Kamala Harris, Johnson’s Organizations: CNN —, Affordable, White, CNN, GOP, Republican, Democratic, Republicans, GOP Doctors Caucus, House Democrat, Congress, Trump, NBC News Locations: Pennsylvania, Bethlehem , Pennsylvania, Lehigh, Washington, Michigan, Lansing , Michigan
‘Go wild’ with RFK Jr.Trump has promised to give Kennedy leeway to remake the way the government health apparatus protects Americans. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and former President Donald Trump shake hands during a campaign rally at Desert Diamond Arena on August 23, 2024, in Glendale, Arizona. Both Trump and Kennedy have expressed vaccine skepticism, and Kennedy has been a longtime activist pushing debunked theories about vaccines. In a potential new Trump administration, Musk promises a reinvention of the federal bureaucracy. “Let’s start from scratch,” Musk said at an event in October in Pittsburgh, suggesting a drastic remaking of the federal bureacracy.
Persons: Donald Trump, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, , Trump, Kennedy, “ I’m, ” Trump, Anne Frank, Rebecca Noble, we’ve, ” Kennedy, Aaron Pellish, Trump’s, “ Trump’s, CNN’s Meg Tirell, Musk, It’s, Musk’s, ” Musk, Elon Musk, Dave McCormick, Michael Swensen, CNN’s David Goldman, “ Musk, ” Goldman, Larry Summer, ” Summers, Summers, Mike Johnson, , ” Johnson, Kamala Harris, Johnson Organizations: CNN, Trump, Elon, RFK Jr, Madison, PAC, New York Times, Desert Diamond Arena, HHS, Department of Health, Human Services, CDC, Centers, Disease Control, FDA, Food, Drug Administration, National Institutes of Health, USDA, Department of Agriculture, SpaceX, Tesla, “ Department, Government, Fox News, Congressional, Social Security, Republicans, Health Locations: Nazi Germany, Glendale , Arizona, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, White
WASHINGTON — House Speaker Mike Johnson took a dig at Obamacare during an event in Pennsylvania on Monday, telling a crowd there will be “massive” health care changes in America if Donald Trump wins the election. “No Obamacare,” Johnson responded, rolling his eyes. And so health care is one of the sectors and we need this across the board,” Johnson said. Johnson, who has crisscrossed the country to campaign for GOP House candidates, spoke only in broad terms at his Monday event. “If you take government bureaucrats out of the health care equation and you have doctor-patient relationships, it’s better for everybody.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Donald Trump, ” Johnson, Ryan Mackenzie, Johnson, Kamala Harris, ” Harris, he’s, Harris, ” Sen, Tom Cotton, Sen, Mitch McConnell, It’s, , Organizations: WASHINGTON, GOP, NBC News, Affordable, Trump, Republican, ACA, GOP House Locations: Pennsylvania, America, Bethlehem, U.S, Obamacare, Ky
Here are the biggest calls on Wall Street on Tuesday: Evercore ISI reiterates Amazon as overweight Evercore says it's sticking with the stock ahead of earnings later this week. Evercore ISI reiterates Uber as overweight Evercore says it's bullish on Uber heading into earnings on Thursday. Janney upgrades First Solar to buy from neutral Janney says the solar company is attractive ahead of earnings on Tuesday afternoon. " Evercore ISI reiterates Meta as overweight Evercore says it's sticking with Meta ahead of earnings on Wednesday. Barclays reiterates Tesla as equal weight Barclays raised its price target on the stock to $235 per share from $220.
Persons: Evercore, Uber, it's bullish, Janney, Goldman Sachs, Ford, Goldman, Wells, Tesla, Morgan Stanley, Bernstein, TD Cowen, Cowen, it's, Mizuho, Stephens, ROA, Guggenheim, HOOD, we've Organizations: Ford, CTV, APP, Citi, Apple, Apple Intelligence, Barclays, Walmart, Mizuho, Netflix, Guggenheim, Six Flags Entertainment Locations: Mexican, Brazil, Mexico, China, U.S
He said a Harris administration "will build on existing programs, increasing federal spending to make health care more affordable for people." Still, Socal said a Trump administration wouldn't have much flexibility to dismantle or scale back the law without change from Congress. The IRA extended enhanced subsidies that made ACA health plans more affordable for millions of households through 2025 — a provision Harris plans to make permanent if elected, her campaign said. A Democratic House or Senate would likely block any of Trump's sweeping changes to Medicaid, according to Altman. Vance this month also said a future Trump administration would defund Planned Parenthood.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump, Drew Altman, Harris, KFF, Anna Moneymaker, Biden, Joe Biden's, Mariana Socal, Socal, didn't, Stephen Patrick, KFF's Altman, Nathan Posner, Altman, Bill Clark, Roe, Wade, Joe Raedle, Stacey Lee, Johns, Lee, mifepristone, Sen, JD Vance, Trump's, Vance, Nicholas Kamm Organizations: Democratic, U.S, U.S . Naval, Getty, Reuters, CNBC, Congress, The Commonwealth Fund, RAND, U.S . Department of Health, Human Services, Washington , D.C, Republicans, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Trump, wouldn't, Biden, Medicare, Emory University, Lawmakers, Affordable, ACA, Medicaid, Democrats, White, Anadolu, Social Security, Capitol, CQ, Inc, The New York Times, Siena College, PBS, Prime, Convention, Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, Republican Party, U.S . Senate, Food and Drug Administration, FDA, CNN, Afp Locations: Israel, Washington, U.S, Washington ,, Canada, Jacksonville , Florida, Ohio
She frequently advertises Republicans for Harris, a group that includes the late senator’s son Jim McCain, former Sen. Jeff Flake and Mesa Mayor John Giles. Maricopa County, home of Phoenix, accounts for about two-thirds of Arizona voters, including many of those disaffected Republicans who are well-educated center-right voters. Harris praises McCain in Arizona campaign stopsIn a campaign swing through Arizona last week, Harris fondly — and repeatedly — spoke of McCain and lavished praise on his ACA vote. “It required one more vote to keep it intact, and that vote was the late, great John McCain,” Harris said in Chandler, just outside Phoenix. The Trump campaign dismissed Harris’ GOP outreach as a mirage.
Persons: PHOENIX, Kamala Harris, vanquishing Donald Trump, Sen, John McCain, Joe Biden, Harris, , Barrett Marson, ” Marson, Donald Trump, ” Harris, Trump, Jim McCain, Jeff Flake, Mesa Mayor John Giles, ” Jen Cox, we’ve, Arizonans, McCain, ” Giles, Giles, Kyrsten, Mark Kelly’s, Kelly’s, Sinema, , I’ll, Kelly, , Rachel Reisner, Cox, Nikki Haley, Marson, Trump’s, ” Cox, ” “ Arizonans, Ruben Gallego, Gallego, Kari Lake, ” Gallego, I’m Organizations: GOP, McCain, Department, Republicans, McCain Republicans, Mesa Mayor, NBC News, Republican, Trump, Democrats, Democrat, Democratic, Green Party, Democratic Party, New York Times, Siena College, Biden, Arizona, Department of Education, Senate Locations: Arizona, Phoenix, Maricopa County, playbook Arizona, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Mesa, Trump, Chandler, Pima County, Tucson
Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris face off in the ABC presidential debate on Sept. 10, 2024. The previous Trump administration didn't pursue those types of consumer protections. In contrast, Democrats, including Harris, have historically supported EVs and incentives such as those under the Biden administration's signature Inflation Reduction Act. Meanwhile, Harris, if elected, can build on existing efforts of the Biden administration to deliver savings to more patients, they said. Trump also led multiple efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act, including its expansion of Medicaid to low-income adults.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, he's, Harris, Joe Biden's, Trump, Pete Buttigieg, Jonathan Kletzel, didn't, — Leslie Josephs Banks Big, JPMorgan Chase, Biden, Tobin Marcus, it's, Sen, JD Vance, they're, Lindsey Johnson, Hugh Son, Pablo Di Si, EVs, Joseph Spak, Harris hasn't, Mike Wayland, Drugmakers, Trump hasn't, Mariana Socal, Annika Kim Constantino, David Zaslav, John Malone, Time Warner, Simon, Simon & Schuster, Marc DeBevoise, Jonathan Miller, Elon Musk's, Musk, I'm, MAGA, I'm Dark MAGA, , TikTok, — Lillian Rizzo, Alex Sherman, Michael Lynn, — Amelia Lucas Organizations: ABC, Getty, U.S, Trump, Treasury, Justice Department, Federal Trade Commission, Consumer Financial, Bureau, CNBC, The Biden Department of Transportation, Democratic, American Airlines, JetBlue Airways, Spirit Airlines, Industry, Boeing, JPMorgan, Securities and Exchange Commission, Currency, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Biden, Wolfe Research, Bank, Republican, Bankers, Democratic Party, Consumer Bankers Association, Republicans, Volkswagen Group of America, Automotive News, Environmental Protection Agency, UBS, Mike Wayland Health, Commonwealth Fund, Medicare, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Annika Kim Constantino Media, Paramount Global, Skydance, Warner Bros, Discovery, Allen & Co, Sun, Media, Disney, Fox Corp, Time, Simon &, Random, MGM, FCC, Integrated Media, Twitter, Capitol, White, Lawmakers, Meta's Facebook, Alex Sherman Restaurants, National Restaurant Association, National Labor Relations Board, Social Security, Washington Post, Cornell University Locations: United States, PwC, JetBlue's, U.S, China, Ohio, Michigan, California
Lisa Jolly pays less for her health insurance thanks to enhanced premium tax credits. The subsidies could expire next year, increasing the costs of health insurance for millions. "When I combine rising grocery costs with rising insurance costs, it just becomes almost unbearable." The subsidies expiration could pose difficulties for millions of AmericansThe results of the November election could determine the fate of the enhanced subsidies. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that 3.8 million people could become uninsured if the enhanced subsidies expire, according to Reuters.
Persons: Lisa Jolly, , Jolly, she's, Jessica, I'm, Jeanne Shaheen, Tammy Baldwin, Lauren Underwood, Cynthia Cox, Cox Organizations: Service, Business, Center, Budget, Jolly, Democratic, Senate, Republican, Congressional Budget Office, KFF, Congressional, Reuters Locations: Steubenville , Ohio, Pittsburgh, Washington
Welcome to the online version of From the Politics Desk, an evening newsletter that brings you the NBC News Politics team’s latest reporting and analysis from the campaign trail, the White House and Capitol Hill. In today’s edition, senior national political reporter Sahil Kapur examines how the political fight over Obamacare was reignited this week. The Obamacare wars return to the campaign trailBy Sahil KapurObamacare has re-entered the chat. Also this week, Trump’s running mate, Sen. JD Vance, raised eyebrows by rewriting the history of Trump’s attempts to repeal Obamacare when he was president. Meanwhile, Barack Obama will make his first appearance on the campaign trail this fall next week in Pittsburgh at an event for Harris.
Persons: Sahil Kapur, Obamacare, Kristen Welker, Sahil Kapur Obamacare, Barack Obama, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump’s, Trump, Harris, Harris ’, “ Trump, Sen, JD Vance, “ Donald Trump could’ve, ” Vance, Tuesday’s, Vance, Tom Cotton, Cotton, Monica Alba, Jonathan Allen, Peter Nicholas, Yamiche, Natasha Korecki, Matt Dixon, Kamala Harris ’, What’s, Bob Casey, Dave McCormick, Casey, McCormick’s, Joe Biden, Biden Organizations: NBC, White House, Capitol, White, Affordable, Republicans, GOP, NBC News, Democrats, Democratic, Keystone State, Trump, McCormick Locations: Pennsylvania, Keystone, Butler, Pa, Pittsburgh, Connecticut, Philadelphia, Wisconsin
“Democrats always want to be talking about health care because they have a political advantage over Republicans on the issue with voters,” Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at KFF, a nonpartisan health policy research organization, told CNN. “Americans care about health care. They want to know where the candidates stand when it comes to health care,” Sarah Fioroni, a senior researcher at Gallup, told CNN. Early in the campaign, Trump revived talk of wanting to repeal the Affordable Care Act and replace it with something better. The Trump campaign accused the Harris campaign of “lying because they are losing,” Karoline Leavitt, the campaign’s national press secretary, said in an email to CNN.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Harris, Donald Trump, Trump, Sen, JD Vance, ” Larry Levitt, “ Trump, Vance, Sarah Fioroni, “ It’s, Biden, Obamacare, , ” “, , , , ” Karoline Leavitt Organizations: CNN, White, Trump, West Health, Gallup, Democrats, ABC, Republican,
As Donald Trump calls for overhauling the Affordable Care Act with a new health care system, one Republican senator running for an influential leadership position says the party should combine that pursuit with a major tax bill in the new year. “We’ll have an opportunity next year, when it comes time to extend the Trump tax cuts, to adopt new policies that again will make health care more affordable and more personalized,” Cotton said. “Because a lot of health care in this country does go through our tax code. “Because the Democrats have become so obstructionist on President Trump, the opportunity to pass major legislation next year will probably be centered on the extension of the Trump tax cuts from 2017 in addition to other measures,” Cotton said. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., who sits on the Finance Committee that oversees tax and health care policy, said Congress will scrutinize Trump’s litany of expensive proposals in a tax bill.
Persons: Donald Trump, Sen, Tom Cotton, , ” Cotton, Trump, Cotton, Kamala Harris, it’s, Thom Tillis, ” Tillis, , “ We’ve, we’ll, John Thune, Republicans “, we’ve, ” Thune, Garrett Haake, Sahil Kapur Organizations: NBC News, Trump, GOP, ACA, Republicans, Republican, Finance, Social Locations: New York, Washington
The idea behind a high-risk pool was to provide a safety net for people with pre-existing conditions struggling to find coverage. The high-risk pools, however, were critically underfunded, making monthly premiums for some patients double what they would be for a healthy individual, Cox said. “If you got into a high-risk pool, you might have had an exclusion on your coverage for six to 12 months,” Cox said. “When it doesn’t, it collapses.”Graves said that the U.S. could move back to a high-risk pool model but it would require “a massive amount of government subsidies to work.”“They would basically have to infuse the high-risk pool with enough subsidies to keep premiums affordable for people,” he said. “We had isolated pre-existing pools for the past 25 years, and they don’t work.”
Persons: Sen, JD Vance, Ohio, , , Arthur Caplan, Cynthia Cox, ” Cox, Cox, John A . Graves, Tim Walz, ” Walz, ” Graves, Caplan, ” Caplan Organizations: Republican, NYU Langone Medical, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Democratic, Minnesota Gov Locations: New York City, Nashville , Tennessee, U.S
Vice presidential candidates JD Vance and Tim Walz faced off in their first and only debate Tuesday night, squaring off over everything from foreign policy and the economy to the 2020 election and abortion rights. Contemporaneous newspaper reports — first reported by Minnesota Public Radio News and APM Reports — place Walz in Nebraska at the time. Fact-check: Is housing 60% more expensive during the Biden administration? “Iran, which launched this attack, has received over $100 billion in unfrozen assets thanks to the Kamala Harris administration," Vance said. As part of a prisoner exchange the Biden administration negotiated with Iran last year, $6 billion more in Iranian assets were unfrozen.
Persons: Vance, Tim Walz, Walz, , America —, , , That’s, Kamala Harris, Biden, Harris, hasn’t, " Walz, Harris “, she’s, Donald Trump’s, You’ve, Donald Trump, Obama, Harris wasn’t, unfroze, Trump, Trump “, I’ve, Mike Pence Organizations: America, CNN, Minnesota Public Radio, APM, U.S, Center for American Progress, Economic, Global, Washington Post, Social Security, Immigration, Department of Homeland Security, NBC News, Biden, Democratic, Health Affairs, Customs, Capitol, Centers for Disease Control, Minnesota Health Locations: China, Nebraska, Hong Kong, Beijing, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Ireland, Norway, Spain, Lechleitner, U.S, Iran, Minnesota,
The debate, hosted by CBS News in New York City, could be the last event featuring candidates from both campaigns, with Kamala Harris and Donald Trump not currently scheduled to debate again. Vance wouldn't give a straight answer, instead throwing a question back at Walz about censorship about the Covid-19 pandemic on Facebook. “Sometimes, of course, I disagree with the president, but I’ve also been extremely open about the fact that I was wrong about Donald Trump. "Kamala Harris' day one was Donald Trump’s failure on Covid that led to the collapse of our economy. “Donald Trump could’ve destroyed the program.
Persons: Sen, JD Vance, Tim Walz, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Vance, Walz, assail “ Donald Trump’s, , Trump, “ Donald Trump, Vance sidestepped, Harris, “ I’ve, Vance wouldn't, , Trump Vance, Hitler ”, I’ve, ” Vance, ” Walz, Donald Trump’s, Tim, Donald Trump hasn’t, “ Donald Trump could’ve Organizations: Democratic Gov, CBS News, , Facebook, Minnesota Public Radio, Democratic, Republican Congress, GOP, Biden, Trump, Republicans Locations: Ohio, Minnesota, New York City, Israel, , Hong Kong
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