courtesy of Gary Zuckett
West Virginia Citizen Action rally outside the office building in Charleston – 187,000 West Virginians would be affected by the repeal of the ACA
The healthcare battle in the Senate has honed in on a few wavering "moderate" Republicans, many of them from states that are heavy users of Medicaid--and the ACA's Medicaid expansion--for health insurance coverage. Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia is one of those, and despite the state's reputation as being the center of Trumplandia, Gary Zuckett of West Virginia Citizen Action Group says that people are ready to fight to keep their healthcare--and maybe even to make it better.
Outtakes
"Like you said, we are sort of labelled as Trump Country now and we have voted for the Republican candidate ever since George Bush II got elected. It is easy to paint in broad strokes like that, but I would also remind folks that in the Democratic primary last year, the State of West Virginia went for Bernie Sanders. So there is a hunger for a populist message here in West Virginia. Unfortunately, our current president and his false populism appeal to a lot of people...
We have been painted as a backward regressive state and I think that is unfair. One of the things that we saw after the election was a total insurgency of people coming out of the woodwork wanting to be active. Newly minted activists and people that had been active in their youth and maybe are now retired and decided, “Well, I better get back into this because times are rough” and pulled together. There are Indivisible groups in most of the counties in West Virginia now. There are women’s huddles from the Women’s March that are still meeting here in West Virginia on a regular basis and talking to each other. We, out of this office, helped organize a sister Women’s March to the one in D.C. We had somewhere between 3,000-4,000 people show up at our state capitol, which blew everybody away, including us."
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