Georgia Activists Confront GOP Rejection of Medicaid as Moral Mondays Spread Across South
By Amy Goodman, Juan González
March 20, 2014
| "Medicaid expansion now!" was the rallying cry this week of a rising
grassroots movement spreading across the South. Nearly 40 people were
arrested at the Georgia State Senate on Tuesday protesting a bill that
would bar the expansion of Medicaid. Georgia has the fifth-highest
number of uninsured people of any state in the country. Under the
Affordable Care Act, an estimated 650,000 additional residents would be
eligible for Medicaid. But Georgia is one of a number of Republican-led
states that have opted out of such Medicaid expansion. The protest at
the Georgia State Senate was the largest to date by Moral Monday
Georgia, an outgrowth of the Moral Monday movement that began in North
Carolina. We are joined by Reverend Dr. Raphael Warnock, senior pastor
of the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia, which was the
spiritual home of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Rev. Warnock was among the
protesters arrested for nonviolent civil disobedience on Tuesday. "Dr.
King said that the time comes when silence is betrayal," Rev. Warnock
says. "That time is now. The issue is affordable healthcare for all in
the richest country in the world."
No comments:
Post a Comment