Medicare for All
Healthcare is a human right, not a privilege tied to employment, income, or geography. Medicare for All would guarantee comprehensive, universal healthcare coverage to every person in the United States—no premiums, no deductibles, no surprise bills. By prioritizing patient care over corporate profit, a single-payer system lowers costs, expands access, and ensures that medical decisions are made by patients and doctors—not insurance companies.
The United States spends more on healthcare than any other nation, yet millions remain uninsured or underinsured, and countless families delay care due to cost. This is not a failure of medicine—it is a failure of policy.
Healthcare should serve people, not profit. Medicare for All provides a clear and proven solution: a universal, publicly funded healthcare system that guarantees care for everyone, regardless of employment, income, age, or pre-existing conditions.
Universal Coverage Without Barriers
Under Medicare for All, every person in the United States would be covered automatically. Coverage would not depend on employment status, marital status, or financial means.
This system eliminates:
- Premiums, deductibles, and copays
- Surprise medical bills
- Network restrictions
- Denials based on pre-existing conditions
No one should have to choose between rent and seeing a doctor.
Comprehensive, Evidence-Based Care
Medicare for All must provide comprehensive coverage that reflects real healthcare needs, including:
- Primary and preventive care
- Hospitalization and emergency services
- Prescription drugs
- Mental health and substance abuse treatment
- Reproductive health services
- Dental, vision, and hearing care
- Long-term and disability care
- Gender-affirming care and other medically necessary services
Healthcare decisions should be guided by medical expertise and patient needs—not political ideology or corporate profit margins.
Lower Costs, Better Outcomes
A single-payer system dramatically reduces administrative waste by replacing thousands of private insurance plans with one streamlined public program. This efficiency allows us to:
- Negotiate lower prescription drug prices
- Reduce administrative overhead
- Lower overall healthcare costs
- Improve health outcomes for all
Medicare for All is not only more humane—it is more cost-effective.
Healthcare Freedom and Economic Security
Tying healthcare to employment traps workers in jobs they can’t afford to leave and discourages entrepreneurship. Medicare for All restores freedom by:
- Allowing people to change jobs without losing healthcare coverage
- Supporting small businesses and entrepreneurs
- Strengthening labor bargaining power
- Reducing financial stress and medical debt
Healthcare security strengthens economic security for individuals and families alike.
Ending Insurance Company Control
Private insurance companies exist to maximize profit, often by denying care or limiting coverage. Medicare for All puts patients first by:
- Removing profit incentives from healthcare decisions
- Ending coverage denials for medically necessary care
- Simplifying access to care
- Ensuring transparency and accountability in healthcare delivery
Doctors and patients—not insurance executives—should make medical decisions.
Public Health, Not Just Sick Care
A universal healthcare system allows us to shift focus from crisis response to prevention. Medicare for All enables:
- Earlier diagnoses
- Better management of chronic conditions
- Expanded mental health services
- Stronger public health infrastructure
Preventive care saves lives and reduces long-term costs.
A System That Includes Everyone
Healthcare is inseparable from civil rights. A universal system must serve everyone equitably, without discrimination based on gender, sexuality, disability, race, or income. Medicare for All ensures that:
- No group is excluded or singled out
- Medically necessary care is covered for all
- Personal medical decisions remain private
Healthcare is about fairness, dignity, and equal access for everyone.