Mitch McConnell Is Blocking Action on Voters’ Top Two Priorities

February 20th 2020

 
Mitch McConnell (McConnell Center)

Mitch McConnell (McConnell Center)

By Josh Israel

American Independence Foundation

The top concerns for American voters going into the 2020 elections are health care affordability and drug costs, according to a new poll from Politico and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health published Wednesday.

The poll found about 80% of those surveyed identified “taking steps to lower the cost of health care” as either “very” or “extremely” important. Reducing prescription drug costs was deemed “very” or “extremely” important by 75%. The two issues ranked as the highest priorities for voters out of 22 possible issues.

But legislation from the House of Representatives to address these concerns is currently being blocked by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Last May, the Democratic-controlled House passed H.R. 987, the Strengthening Health Care and Lowering Prescription Drug Costs Act. It included provisions to stop the Trump administration’s sabotage of Obamacare, help fund state health insurance marketplaces, and improve transparency.

In December, the House passed H.R. 3, the Elijah E. Cummings Lower Drug Costs Now Act. That legislation would allow the federal government to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies on the cost of prescription drugs for Medicare, restrict price hikes for enrollees, and limit their out-of-pocket costs.

A small number of House Republicans even voted for these bills.

But now they are resting among the more than 400 House-passed pieces of legislation that are being blocked in the Senate by McConnell.

In an interview last week, he made it clear he would not allow votes on these and other items sitting on his desk.

“They’ve been on full left-wing parade over there, trotting out all of their left-wing solutions that are going to be issues in the fall campaign,” McConnell told Fox News. “We’re not gonna pass those.”

A September 2019 survey by Consumer Reports found that 30% of Americans who currently use prescription medications saw out-of-pocket costs increase in the past year.

Asked whether he would allow any action on prescription drugs this year, McConnell said only that the Senate was “wrestling with that.”

In the weeks immediately following McConnell’s announcement last year that he would block any consideration of the House prescription drug bill, he received more than $50,000 contributions from individuals and PACs connected to the pharmaceutical industry.

Meanwhile, the number of uninsured Americas rose by about two million people in 2018, according to a Census Bureau report — the first year-to-year increase in a decade, even amid what Trump has called the “greatest economy in the history of our country.”

 

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