From California to Florida to Maine, communities in 25 cities across the United States are staging rallies, picnics, and flash mobs this week to celebrate Thursday’s 50th anniversary of Medicare—and call for its expansion into a system that provides publicly-funded healthcare for all.
“It is urgent that we continue organizing for the right to healthcare by fighting efforts to roll back or privatize Medicare and joining with movements around the country to establish a publicly-financed healthcare system that includes all people,” Ellen Schwartz, president of the Vermont Workers’ Center, told Common Dreams.
The nationwide actions marking President Lyndon B. Johnson’s July 30, 1965 signing of the bill that created Medicare were organized by a broad array of organizations including Physicians for a National Health Program, Alliance for Retired Americans, National Nurses United (NNU), and Public Citizen.
They also include high-profile supporters, among them 2016 presidential hopeful Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who spoke at a Washington, D.C. rally on Thursday morning. “Healthcare is a right for all people, not a privilege,” Sanders told a cheering crowd.
The nationwide actions come at a time of dramatic consolidation in the health insurance industry, giving way to monopolies that critics charge reveal the shortcomings of the Affordable Care Act’s for-profit model. Meanwhile, Medicare faces a fresh flurry of attacks from the right, as conservatives call for cuts and privatization, despite the program’s broad popularity.
“Medicare came into existence after years of struggle to provide health access for the elderly in the U.S., and ensures that older folks are not left to the whims of the insurance industry and denied coverage due to ‘high risk,'” said Schwartz.
The coordinated protests also come amid the growing movement for Black lives that is taking on institutional racism—and demanding changes to political and economic systems that consign people of color to early deaths.
In 2010, life expectancy for Black people in America was nearly four years lower than for the White population. A 2013 study finds that Black and Latino people in the United States are far less likely than their white counterparts to have health insurance.
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