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Covid brought to the fore the need for true universal single-payer healthcare. Medicare for All is my top legislative priority. In the s, when other countries around the world had long implemented or were implementing national health insurance plans, we put our health in the hands of private enterprise. Decades and billions of lobbying dollars later, the results are clear: the United States spends far more on healthcare than any other nation, with significantly worse outcomes — including the highest maternal mortality rate in the developed world.
With a single-payer program, all residents of the United States will be covered for their medical services, including, preventive, long-term care, mental health, reproductive health care, prescription drug, and medical supply costs. Eliminating co-pays, premiums, and deductibles mean that everyday Americans will no longer have to weigh the cost of paying for life-saving medicine against feeding their families.
Reproductive justice policies must also be included in Medicare for All, ensuring that no-cost services of contraception, STI prevention, abortion, pre-natal and post-natal care are offered to all communities. Solving the COVID crisis requires the coordinated implementation of several federal programs, including a single-payer national program. Until we can elect enough candidates to lead on these issues, healthcare for everyday Americans will continue to be an unaffordable privilege.
What are the critical differences between you and the other candidates seeking this post? Income inequality is at the root of our country's issues of healthcare, climate, housing, and more. Unlike the incumbent, I'm refusing contributions from corporate PACs, real estate developers, and the fossil fuel industry.
The incumbent voted to weaken Dodd-Frank in the wake of the financial crisis. In the face of another economic crisis, that lack of regulation will be exploited by Wall Street. The incumbent continues to take money from the military-industrial complex, voted against the Iran Deal during the Obama years, and recently partnered with Republican Rep. Joe Wilson to deploy an Iron Dome missile defense against Iran, which will only worsen tensions created by President Trump.
If we want to protect our troops in Iraq, we have to fight to get the Iran Deal back and bring our troops home. If you are a challenger, in what way has the current board or officeholder failed the community or district or constituency. As a sitting American President tears apart families and our democracy, we need our elected officials to fight on the frontlines against authoritarianism. Yet what we have is a four-term incumbent who repeatedly fails to show moral and political courage, choosing corporate donors over people every time. When I see my opponent vote for bills with Republicans, that even Nancy Pelosi has voted against, it tells me that a Democrat by name isn't good enough.
The legislation she supports in the name of bipartisanship presents ulterior motives and real harm to our communities. Some may see these votes as necessary compromises to "get things done," but it's this way of thinking that got us here: the midst of a national healthcare crisis, corporate bailouts, and the possibility of another recession.
National leaders still continue to oppose universal single-payer healthcare, but enthusiastically support corporate bailouts to the tunes of billions while the people get a one time check that can barely cover rent for most Queens residents. Rank-and-file members of the Democratic Party, especially the incumbent, are comfortable doing the bare minimum to get to the next election cycle, rather than actually fighting for real policies that meet desired policy outcomes.
Growing up in Queens, I've seen firsthand how elders are robbed of their respect and dignity in their golden years because of their or their family's circumstances. Elders who are retired should not be priced out of their homes or be unable to afford long-term quality healthcare. The Golden Years Security Act will also subsidize and expand home care services, increase the number of union nurses and caretakers, provide resources to train caretakers, meet the challenges of end-of-life care, and help families that must choose assisted living facilities.
I will make sure Green New Deal projects are introduced in the district as well as the creation of millions of new social housing units. I also support tuition-free public colleges, universities and trade schools, investing in UBI experiments, and ensuring a path to citizenship for our DREAMer friends and neighbors. What accomplishments in your past would you cite as evidence you can handle this job?
My entire career has been dedicated to advancing the causes of social justice and addressing inequity, particularly those faced by marginalized communities. Before becoming a stay at home dad, I led the policy department at College and Community Fellowship working to eliminate barriers to higher education for currently and formerly incarcerated individuals. There, I worked alongside impacted individuals, activists and other stakeholders to eliminate the box on SUNY admissions forms, get the Obama DOE to roll out the Pell Pilot Program for incarcerated students, and see the issuance of national guidance to eliminate the box from the college admissions process.
I'm a stay-at-home dad, a renter, a community advocate and a progressive candidate who was born in Elmhurst to a Puerto Rican mother and a Filipino immigrant father. I was raised by my mom — a single parent and SEIU nurse — and my abuela in a one-bedroom apartment.