Equal access to health care can be a reality
While standing on
I know what it's like to struggle to make ends meet. I know what it's like to grow up on food stamps. I know what it's like to need health care, but not have the means to afford it. This is why I ran for office three years ago: to be the voice of so many Americans living on the margins. And this is why I speak out with that voice now as
Sadly, those expanded subsidies are set to expire at the end of next year. If that is allowed to happen, millions of Americans will lose their health insurance coverage because they would no longer be able to afford it. Millions more would see hikes in their premiums. In hard numbers, around 12 million people would face premium increases of
Across
Yet – even as these subsidies help overcome hurdles to affordable, accessible care–there is one more hurdle for many in our community who need health insurance. Federal relief is largely based on household income. Broadly, lower incomes receive more help. But while this policy comes with the best of intentions, younger Americans with higher incomes are still priced out of the care they need.
We need to adjust how federal relief is calculated and one easy way to do this is add an age adjustment to the formula. That kind of adjustment lowers premiums for everybody, boosts enrollment in the federal marketplace, improves access to care for all, and fixes an unintended hurdle for younger Americans like me who are seeking affordable coverage.
We ask them to help us stand up for
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