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Health Care

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In March 2010, President Obama fulfilled a promise that Democrats have pursued for nearly a century: making health care available to all Americans. Despite unanimous opposition from Republicans, Democrats were finally able to pass comprehensive health reform into law.

By 2014, health reform will eliminate all discrimination for pre-existing conditions, start the process of expanding health insurance coverage for an additional 32 million Americans, and provide the largest middle-class tax cut for health care in history.

The Affordable Care Act has already begun to end the worst insurance company abuses. Since 2010, children with pre-existing conditions can no longer be denied insurance.

The Affordable Care Act also provides tax cuts to small business to help offset the costs of employee coverage, and tax credits to help families pay for insurance. Health reform will also lower costs for families and for businesses and for the federal government, reducing our deficit by more than $1 trillion in the next two decades alone.

And health reform strengthens Medicare by reducing fraud, improving quality of care, and closing the Medicare “donut hole” gap in seniors’ prescription drug coverage.

Like Medicare before it, the Affordable Care Act lays a new foundation for our country that will bring additional security and stability to the American people for generations to come.

Recent Updates
  • Death Cab for Cutie’s Chris Walla hits the campaign trail

    Death Cab for Cutie's Chris Walla says he got got drawn into the Obama grassroots movement ''the same way everyone else did'' in 2008. This year is just as critical, he says, and he's making calls and canvassing once again. He's also stopping at college campuses as the Gotta Vote bus tour rolls through Wisconsin to make sure students know that by making their voices heard on the issues they care about, they can affect the outcome of this election. For Walla, that issue is Obamacare.

    Death Cab for Cutie's Chris Walla says he got got drawn into the Obama grassroots movement "the same way everyone else did" in 2008. "I was ready for a change, ready for some optimism, ready to get out of the slump that we had been dragged into by the previous president." Walla was on tour with his band that year, but even on the road, he spent his days knocking on doors in cities like St. Louis and Minneapolis between shows.

    This year is just as critical, he says, and he's making calls and canvassing once again. He's also stopping at college campuses as the Gotta Vote bus tour rolls through Wisconsin to make sure students know that by making their voices heard on the issues they care about, they can affect the outcome of this election. For Walla, that issue is Obamacare.

    "Having grown up in an indie band, we all quit our jobs and/or dropped out of school at 22 to promote our record," says Walla. "We didn't realize it at the time, but we were starting a business. We were planting a seed in a place where I couldn't have predicted that 15 years later we'd be employing dozens of people. One of the things that we struggled with at different points was health insurance. It hits so close to home for me. It often feels like that one thing you can't afford to do. You've paid your car insurance, tuition, rent, whatever bills you have to keep up on.

    "It's such a huge step in the right direction for this nation in terms of strengthening the social contract—the idea that we take care of each other as a nation. I believe it's vital that as the richest nation in the world that we don't let one another go personally bankrupt because something unforeseen happens. That's why I'm out here—to remind people that this president has done a lot of great things."

    If you want to see four more years of great things from President Obama, then you gotta vote.

  • The Real Romney

    Mitt Romney is trying to hide his extreme positions from voters. Share this video to make sure people remember who the real Romney is—then pitch in $5 to help us fight back.
  • Wisconsin’s Hmong community supports the President

    During a Gotta Vote bus tour stop at the Schofield Oriental Market, a grocery store and gathering place for the Hmong community in Wausau, Thomas, OFA's Hmong vote director, says his community—more than 50,000 strong in Wisconsin—stands with President Obama.

    During a Gotta Vote bus tour stop at the Schofield Oriental Market, a grocery store and gathering place for the Hmong community in Wausau, Thomas, OFA's Hmong vote director, says his community—more than 50,000 strong in Wisconsin—stands with President Obama.

    "We are very supportive of the President," says Thomas. "We are the middle class and the lower class, and what the President has done for the last four years has greatly benefited the community. We need him to continue."

    Like so many others we've met on the Gotta Vote bus, Lee says the Affordable Care Act has had a major impact on his family. "I have three kids who have graduated from high school and went on to college, and now my health insurance does cover my children. That has been very good for my family."

    So Lee has been doing his part to get out the vote across the state, educating Hmong Americans about voter registration and early voting and recruiting members of the community to volunteer at the local field office—whatever it takes for Wisconsin to be blue on November 6.

    Gotta Vote

  • "This is personally offensive"

    On the debate stage last week, Mitt Romney shamelessly misled the American people when he said he has a plan to insure people with pre-existing conditions. Like so much of the rhetoric that comes out of Romney's mouth, it's simply not true—even his campaign admitted it after the debate.

    Read More
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Recent Action
Creating greater health care competition and accountability
Democrats passed the Affordable Care Act, providing consumers more choices and improved accountability.
Helping stabilize the economy and reduce the deficit
Democrats passed the Affordable Care Act, which reduces the deficit by more than $100 billion over the next ten years, and $1 trillion the second decade, by limiting unnecessary government spending, waste, fraud and abuse.
Making health care affordable for all Americans
Democrats passed the Affordable Care Act, providing the largest ever middle-class tax cut for health care, reducing premiums and expanding access for millions of families and small businesses.
Milestones