U.S. Rep. Frederica Wilson says Miami-Dade County will be the epicenter of calamity if Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies expire.
“We all know what is going to happen if these tax credits’ expirations are allowed to go into effect,” Wilson told Florida Politics. “That is what we are fighting for.”
The Miami-Dade Democrat released figures earlier this week showing that the 10 districts in the country with the most people enrolled for coverage through the Insurance Marketplace, better known as Obamacare, all sit in Florida. It’s a concern Democrats have sounded across the state.
According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, Wilson’s South Florida district has 258,000 individuals currently enrolled on Obamacare plans. That’s the third-highest number in the country, behind only districts represented by Republican U.S. Rep. Mario Díaz-Balart (300,000 enrollees) and Democratic U.S. Rep. Darren Soto (275,000).
But more importantly, all four congressional districts covering part of Miami-Dade County are in the top five. That includes districts represented by Republican U.S. Reps. Carlos Giménez (244,000) and María Elvira Salazar (236,000).
Wilson said it’s a looming nightmare for South Florida lawmakers, even if no Republican in Florida’s delegation will publicly address it. For the last nearly five years, Wilson has been the only Democrat representing Miami-Dade County in Congress.
“We don’t know how to even approach this in Miami-Dade County,” she said. “Our hospitals, our emergency rooms, our doctors’ offices, family health centers, everyone is just astonished and asking what we can do to circumvent this health care crisis. And it’s just alarming this is affecting one state so much, Florida, and one county, Miami-Dade.”
Díaz-Balart, Giménez and Salazar did not respond to requests for comment on whether Republican leadership should compromise on whether to eliminate subsidies. Wilson suggested that’s only because all are afraid of upsetting Speaker Mike Johnson or, more importantly, President Donald Trump.
“They are just as frightened as I am,” she said. “They are not sure how their constituents are going to handle this huge price increase.”
Soto, a Kissimmee Democrat, said he expects some solution to be reached soon.
“A lot of other House Democrats have been spending a lot of time in Washington trying to make the case for getting this resolved,” he said.
Meanwhile, Wilson said she has spoken with hospital leaders in the region who have stressed to officials the high percentage of patients who rely on ACA plans. The fear many have is that most, when confronted with premiums that leap thousands of dollars each year, simply won’t reenroll. That means emergency rooms will eat the costs of treating people who show up for all levels of care there, exactly the situation the ACA aimed to address when it was passed more than 10 years ago.
Wilson personally feels appalled that the U.S. remains the only Western nation without single-payer health care. But more of her constituents are satisfied to keep the current financial burden they already absorb for insurance.
“They are not asking for it to be free, but are asking for it to be affordable,” she said.
That’s at least true of the ones already aware of the coming price hike. Many won’t be notified until November that their premiums will rise, either through notifications in the mail or when it’s time to reenroll. If the federal shutdown has lingered until then and Republican leadership hasn’t offered any compromise on subsidies, she expects the number of calls coming into Florida offices to skyrocket.
As things stand now, only House Democrats, outside of Republican leadership, are even holding office hours in Washington. That surprises Wilson, who has served through past shutdowns and saw constant negotiations even if a solution took a long time to be reached. This has fed a sense throughout Capitol Hill that the shutdown won’t end any time soon.
“But when everyone is suffering, I’m not sure the American people are going to continue to accept this,” she said.
Florida Democrats say an amendment shot down by the U.S. House Rules Committee could have protected the Everglades from energy exploration.
U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Weston Democrat, pushed for a change in language in the Improving Interagency Coordination for Pipeline Reviews Act (HR 3668) during Committee proceedings. That bill, filed by U.S. Rep. Richard Hudson, a North Carolina Republican, would expedite review of natural gas or liquified gas pipelines by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC).
Wasserman Schultz’s amendment to the bill would have excluded the Everglades and other Florida navigable waters from that change, still requiring extensive review to put a pipeline through Florida’s largestnational park. However, the Rules Committee did not allow the amendment to come to a vote.
“While we spend billions to restore the Everglades, House Republicans voted to pollute it,” Wasserman Schultz posted on social media.
She said the amendment was worked on with the support of most Democrats in Florida’s congressional delegation, including U.S. Reps. Kathy Castor, Lois Frankel, Darren Soto and Frederica Wilson. Wasserman Schultz is the Democratic co-chair of the congressional delegation.
The proposed change “tried to exempt the Everglades from this dirty water bill, but House Republicans rejected it,” Wasserman Schultz said.
Republicans characterized the legislation differently, with some members from Florida.
U.S. Rep. Cory Mills, a New Smyrna Beach Republican, said he supported advancing the bill from the Committee to the floor.
“I voted to support HR 3668, the Improving Interagency Coordination for Pipeline Reviews Act, to cut red tape and speed up approvals for natural gas pipelines and LNG terminals,” he posted. “This bill puts FERC in charge of NEPA (National Environmental Policy Act) reviews, sets strict timelines, improves agency coordination and strengthens pipeline security. This is how we lower energy costs and boost American energy independence.”
FERC is responsible for reviewing and issuing permits for new or expanded gas lines. The legislation, as written, would shift oversight responsibilities from state governments to the agency and eliminate the need for state certifications.
Democratic U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick is staying true to the old maxim, “Never let a crisis go to waste.”
This week, her re-election campaign sent texts to voters imploring them to donate to help her in “fighting back” against what she calls a “politically motivated” attack against her.
She’s referring, of course, to federal charges filed in November accusing her of stealing $5 million in Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) funds to bankroll her 2021 congressional campaign.
“2 weeks ago, I took a stand and voted to demand transparency, truth and accountability from our leaders. The next day, the attacks began. An indictment was filed. This was not random. This was politically motivated retaliation,” the text said.
“But this isn’t about silencing one person. It’s about sending a clear message to anyone who dares to challenge powerful interests: ‘Fall in line — or pay the price. Well, I’m fighting back — but I need you with me. DONATE NOW.”
The text then links to a donations pagethat, among other things, says, “She voted for the truth. They answered with retaliation.”
The fundraising text.
A perusal of Cherfilus-McCormick’s votes from around two weeks back reveals what she is likely referring to: “yes” votes on measures concerning the release of files connected to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Notably, none of the 426 other members of the House who voted to release the Epstein files were federally indicted for embezzling COVID funds in recent weeks.
The grand jury indictment against Cherfilus-McCormick, announced Nov. 19, alleges she and her brother secured funding intended for a COVID vaccine distribution program, but when overpayments were made, she rerouted the money through several accounts that later donated to her campaign.
U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi described the alleged act as “a particularly selfish, cynical crime.”
Cherfilus-McCormick, 46, has maintained and reiterated that she is innocent of wrongdoing, calling the charges “unjust” and “baseless.”
“The timing alone is curious and clearly meant to distract from far more pressing national issues,” she said a day after the indictment was announced, noting that she has “fully cooperated” with a yearslong investigation into the matter. “I look forward to my day in court. Until then, I will continue fighting for my constituents.”
The fundraising site.
Should Cherfilus-McCormick be found guilty of all counts in the indictment, she could face up to 53 years in prison.
Cherfilus-McCormick isn’t the only federal lawmaker from Florida to fundraise off of her legal travails. Last year, following a House Ethics Committee report that there was “substantial evidence” he paid for sex, including with a 17-year-old, former U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz sent out a fundraising plea citing his troubles.
“I need your help,” Gaetz, a Republican, said in an email through his political committee last December. “I’ve fought for you in Congress for eight years against the worst of the Radical Left and Uniparty. Now, they’re seeking their revenge.”
Gaetz, who resigned the month before, called the scrutiny over his alleged impropriety a “witch hunt.”
Former Republican U.S. Rep. George Santos of Long Island used the exact phrase to describe the fraud and money-laundering charges he faced in May 2023, about seven months before his peers in the House expelled him.
Republican U.S. Rep. Greg Steube introduced a resolutionlast month to expel Cherfilus-McCormick. Other than its referral to the Ethics Committee, no action has been taken on the bill.
Cherfilus-McCormick represents Florida’s 20th Congressional District, which spans parts of Broward and Palm Beach counties. She faces Primary challenges from Dale Holness and Elijah Manley, the latter of whom she is suing for defamation over the FEMA funds issue.
Republicans Sendra Dorce and Rodenay Joseph are also running in the district, which leans heavily Democratic.
Florida Politics contacted Cherfilus-McCormick’s Communications Director, Kailyn McBride, seeking comment about the Congresswoman’s texts, but received no response.
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