Dear Friend,
The federal government officially shut down on October 1. That means many of the federal agencies Americans depend on will suspend their operations and many government services will be delayed or temporarily unavailable.
For more information on how a government shutdown impacts you, visit my website.
I’m sure many of you are wondering why this happened. Well, let me explain:
- Policies in Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” cut nearly $1 trillion from Medicaid, which the Congressional Budget Office estimates will cause 7.5 million Americans to lose their health care by 2034.
- Additionally, enhanced Affordable Care Act (ACA) tax credits that have helped nearly 13 million Americans gain affordable coverage are set to expire at the end of this year, causing millions of Americans to lose coverage and premiums to double for tens of millions more.
- Combined, these two policies are projected to strip 10–15 million Americans—Democrats and Republicans alike—of their health insurance. In fact, more Republicans receive health care through the HealthCare.gov marketplace than Democrats.
- More than 290,000 Louisianians are enrolled in health care coverage through the Affordable Care Act.
- Over 250,000 Louisianians are estimated to lose health care as a result of these changes.
Democrats in Congress are asking President Trump and Republicans to reverse these cuts to ensure Americans can keep their health care and to prevent premiums from skyrocketing.
I refuse to stand by while Trump and Republicans’ policies leave millions of Americans without access to health care and drive up costs for everyone.
This is not about “undocumented immigrants receiving government-funded health care,” as many on the Right claim. Undocumented immigrants are not eligible for federally funded health coverage through Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act. That is already prohibited under federal law, and Democrats don’t want to change that.
And if that were truly the Rights’ only concern, why are they refusing to negotiate over how to stop these reckless cuts to the health care of American citizens?
Passing a government funding bill has traditionally been a bipartisan process, yet Congressional Republicans have been unwilling to work with Democrats on our simple requests: ensuring millions of Americans don’t lose access to health care and costs don’t increase when prices are already high.
I urge my Republican colleagues to come to the table and negotiate to end this government shutdown. Millions of Americans are counting on you.
Sincerely,

Troy A. Carter, Sr. Member of Congress
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