
Democrats hammer GOP on Medicaid after weeks of turmoil
Why it matters: The first half of March has been dominated by headlines about disruptions at President Trump's speech to Congress and internal divisions over shutting down the government.
Democrats are now trying to turn their attention back to what has been giving them and their grassroots allies juice since January: Republicans' planned reconciliation bill.
Republicans will likely have to pare down Medicaid spending to reach the spending cuts they need to pass roughly $4.5 trillion in tax cuts.
State of play: The Democratic Policy and Communications Committee — House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries' (D-N.Y.) messaging arm — sent guidance to House offices urging them to hold Day of Action events.
The messaging alert includes talking points, such as: "Republicans want to cut Medicaid to give their billionaire donors yet another tax break. Democrats are fighting to save Medicaid and protect Americans' care."
It also directs offices to a microsite and fact-sheets on the topic.
Driving the news: Jeffries and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) kicked off the day with a joint statement vowing to "oppose the largest Medicaid cut in American history."
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