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Repealing Obamacare While You Sleep

While you slept last night, Senate Republicans took the first major vote to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

The Republican-led Senate started paving the way to repeal ACA by employing procedural tactics. Key components of ACA are under attack with this repeal tactic including Medicaid expansion, subsidies for premiums, and contraception coverage.

The House may vote as early as Friday, so call your Representative today, Call 202-224-3121 to be connected to the Capitol Switchboard

The budget reconciliation process addresses tax and spend measures and the Republicans are using the budget reconciliation process because it does not require 60 votes, only 51 – a simple majority.The majority ofAmericans’ want to keep popular provisions of ACA like ensuring coverage for those with pre-existing conditions and government subsidies for low- and middle-income households. In response to this, Republicans chose to play political games with no regard to the millions of Americans who will suffer as a result. If the budget reconciliation process is used to repeal the individual and employer mandate, it will be hard to keep the popular provisions of the ACA.

However, we’re not backing down: Your calls are working! You’ve made Republicans afraid of repealing ACA without a replacement. Thanks to your efforts, Republicans feel the heat to preserve critical parts of ACA such as coverage for people with pre-existing conditions and allowing people under age 26 to remain on their parents insurance. Together we’ve come this far and we can’t stop now!

Call your Representative today! Ask them to keep the provisions that are important to all Americans, especially young people:

Dependent coverage until age 26
Pre-existing condition coverage
Subsidies to ensure coverage is affordable
Ask them to not repeal without a plan
We know Trump is a liar, so despite his promise at his disastrous press conference, we’re not holding our breath for a replacement plan. We must fight to preserve health care coverage for all.

Danielle Glover
Vice President, Young Democrats of America

Taking Pride in Action

In cities across the country, people have just concluded celebrating Pride Month for the LGBTQ community. Members and allies alike have taken to the streets for parades and parties– laughing, loving, and this year, mourning. 

But we know it’s not enough to just celebrate. We need to act. 

We need to ensure safe spaces exist for LGBTQ Americans, by strengthening non-discrimination laws in the workplace. 

We need to get rid of the unscientific ban on sexually active gay men donating blood so they can help others during tragedy. 

We need comprehensive immigration reform to reunite LGBTQ families and provide opportunity for those seeking America’s freedoms.

We need to protect our transgender brothers and sisters from the brutal violence that they suffer frequently, particularly in communities of color. 

And, now more than ever, we need to strengthen our gun laws so another Orlando does not happen. 

The celebrations have ended but now there’s more work to do. Call your Congressman and ask him or her to take action the important issues facing the LGBTQ community. Here are specific pieces of legislation you can advocate for, right now:

  • Every Child Deserves a Family Act (S. 1382)- ECDFA would prohibit any public child welfare agency receiving federal financial assistance from discriminating against any potential foster or adoptive family on the basis of actual or perceived sexual orientation, gender identity or marital status.
  • Equality Act (H.R. 3185)- The Equality Act would provide consistent and explicit anti-discrimination protections for LGBTQ people across key areas of life, including employment, housing, credit, education, public spaces and services, federally funded programs, and jury service.
  • End Racial Profiling Act (H.R. 1933)- This act would prohibit federal, state, and local law enforcement from targeting a person based on actual or perceived race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, gender, gender identity, or sexual orientation without trustworthy information that is relevant to linking a person to a crime.
  • Hate Crimes Prevention Act (S. 3053)- This is the first gun control measure introduced after the shooting at Pulse nightclub, and would add federal and state hate crimes to the list of convictions that prevent people from buying firearms.

In solidarity,

Jessica Stram
Issue Advocacy Director

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