The congressional chaos edition. Next week, Congress may take up four measures that could greatly affect both the short- and long-term health of our nation, for better or worse. First there is President Biden’s critically important Build Back Better plan – among many vital items, it would ensure that poor people are not left out of Medicaid and would keep the Child Tax Credit expansions from ending. Next there is important, bipartisan legislation to upgrade America’s physical infrastructure. Then there is the business of keeping the federal government open – without action, things shut down on October 1. Last but certainly not least, there is the thorny issue of the U.S. debt ceiling – without action, our country will default on its financial obligations some time in October. Experts say such a doomsday scenario could immediately plunge the nation into recession.
Meanwhile, the pandemic brings mixed news. On the positive side, there are indications that we are at, or probably beyond, the peak of Delta infections. For roughly the past week, the daily infection rate nationwide has declined. But this is of little solace to remaining hotspots – places like Kentucky, Idaho, Oregon and Alaska – Alaska now has the nation’s highest daily infection rate, and COVID-19 is ravaging indigenous populations.
Several states are now invoking “crisis standards of care” – that is hospital-speak for rationing precious health care resources, meaning some people will not receive the care they need because hospitals with short supplies and overextended staff simply cannot provide it. We are not out of the woods yet – not by a long shot. And despite some modelling that shows caseloads leveling off and dropping precipitously by March, the possibility does exist that we will see a winter surge – history tells us that pandemics in particular thrive in early January.
Members of Congress will, in their coming votes, either invest in our health now and our economic future, or recklessly just say “No.” Senator Mitch McConnell is saying “No” – he has said he won’t vote to prevent default and will allow a government shutdown. And he opposes the Build Back Better investments. Every member of Congress needs to hear from their constituents that we’re watching, and need them to say “Yes” to responsible investments and “No” to reckless games of chicken while our future is at stake.
You can tell them here.
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