Here’s How Millions of People Could Lose Health Insurance if Trump’s Tax Bill Becomes Law
The bill is likely to reverse years of escalating health insurance rates in the country.
The bill is likely to reverse years of escalating health insurance rates in the country.
Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” which Fitzpatrick has voted for is projected to kick nearly 12 million people off of Medicaid and cut over $260 billion in food aid.
Doylestown’s Larissa Hopwood, a single mother of a 16-year-old with Type 1 diabetes, sounds off on what the heartless GOP budget bill will mean for her family.
This attack makes a nuclear-armed Iran more likely, not less.
The retaliation came a day after the U.S. launched a surprise attack Sunday morning on three of Iran’s nuclear sites, opening a new chapter of war.
Kristen Crowell, executive director of Fair Share America, said the GOP budget bill is the “most unpopular piece of legislation in the history of this country,” and Rep. Fitzpatrick should be aware of this.
Reporting intern Naomi Weiss interviewed protesters.
The No Kings Day of Defiance is a nationwide mass mobilization of protestors who object to the Trump administration’s “billionaire-first agenda,” its increasing authoritarianism, and the dangerous militarization of civil society.
From big cities to small towns, citizens will declare “no” to authoritarianism on Donald Trump’s birthday.
“It is heartbreaking to see Congress embrace a budget bill that strips meals and health care away from children and families to fund massive tax breaks for the super wealthy and an unaccountable private school voucher program,” said PSEA President Aaron Chapin.
The Bucks County Beacons’s reporting on Senate Bill 780 was incomplete and inaccurate, argues the head of the Bucks County Democratic Committee in an OpEd.
Education reporter Peter Greene breaks down Mahmoud v. Taylor.
“Head Start has been called one of the most successful anti-poverty programs in American history and continuing this comprehensive program is a reason for hope,” said Adam Clark, region advocacy coordinator for Pennsylvania State Education Association.
“This bill would allow you to set aside any state law, you could pollute the air as much as you want, you could pollute the water as much as you want, you could do anything essentially that you wanted that would ordinarily violate the law,” said former Secretary for PA’s Department of Environmental Protection David Hess.