What the cost of insulin may mean for Biden's campaign

business2024-05-22 11:07:257

WASHINGTON (AP) — Rarely a day goes without President Joe Biden mentioning insulin prices.

He promotes a $35 price cap for the medication for Americans on Medicare — in White House speeches, campaign stops and even at non-health care events around the country. His reelection team has flooded swing-state airwaves with ads mentioning it, in English and Spanish.

All that would seemingly add up to a sweeping political and economic impact. The reality is more complicated.

As his campaign tries to emphasize what it sees as an advantage over presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump, Biden often overstates what those people who are eligible for the price cap once paid for insulin. It’s also not clear whether the number of Americans being helped will be enough to help sway November’s election, even in the most closely contested states that could come down to a few thousand votes.

“It is about political signaling in a campaign much more than it is about demonstrating for people that they benefit from the insulin cap,” said Drew Altman, president and CEO of KFF, a nonprofit that researches health care issues. “It is a way to make concrete the fact that you are the health care candidate.”

Address of this article:http://togo.downmusic.org/news-56e799173.html

Popular

Testimony at Sen. Bob Menendez's bribery trial focuses on his wife's New Jersey home

NPC spokesperson affirms full support for HK's legislation of Article 23

Envoy calls for upholding multilateralism

Chinese Embassy deplores Romania's rejection of Huawei's 5G equipment authorization

Mariachis. A flame

West accused of dragging Russia into arms race

China to start second round of shuttle diplomacy on Ukraine crisis

Wang Yi warns against creating AI barriers

LINKS