To Galvanize Local Organizing for Medicare for All, Nurses Union to Kick Off Nationwide 'Barnstorms' This Weekend

Building on rising public support for scrapping the nation’s for-profit healthcare system and replacing it with Medicare for All, the nation’s largest nurses union—along with progressive allies—on Saturday will kick off a week of barnstorms in cities and communities across the United States.

“Any Democratic politician worth their salt needs to get behind Medicare for All. People want it. If you’re not behind it, you need to get out of office.”
—Emily Hibshman, barnstorm volunteer

Volunteers nationwide, coordinated by National Nurses United (NNU), are planning more than 150 events from Feb. 9 to Feb. 13.

As NNU executive director Bonnie Castillo explained, “The barnstorms are about harnessing that momentum and continuing to build it out even further, into every community, conversation by conversation, neighbor by neighbor—until the people’s will for Medicare for All becomes the political will to get it done.”

At the events, according to organizers, “you’ll gather with volunteers near you, talk about the plan to win, and begin organizing to knock doors, make phone calls, and more in your community.” Find an event in your community here.

Recent polling has shown that 70 percent of Americans support a Medicare for All system called for by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and a growing number of Democrats in Congress. The barnstorms come as Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) is set to introduce the Medicare for All Act of 2019 in the House as early as next week.

Not only is a single-payer system increasingly popular with the public and progressive lawmakers, it also is expected to dramatically improve Americans’ healthcare experiences. A new Public Citizen analysis, as Common Dreams reported Monday, found that Medicare for All would “significantly cut healthcare costs, increase systemic efficiency, and improve coverage—while expanding it to everyone.”

“I know people with diabetes literally dying because they cannot afford their insulin… Having healthcare tied to your occupation holds everybody back. In what should be the greatest country in the world, there’s no excuse for this.”
—Briana Moss, barnstorm volunteer

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