||| FROM THE OFFICE OF REP. RICK LARSEN |||
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Rep. Rick Larsen (WA-02) voted to lower the cost of healthcare and prescription drugs for working families and seniors, make a historic down payment to combat climate change and cut the deficit by $300 billion. The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) passed the House by a final vote of 220 to 207 and now heads to the President’s desk to be signed into law.
“Thanks to the American Rescue Plan and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the economy is no longer on the mend – it is on the move. These critical investments ensure all Washingtonians benefit from the economic recovery by making health care and prescription drugs more affordable, creating millions of green jobs, lowering energy costs and combating climate change,” said Larsen.
The IRA addresses many of Larsen’s priorities to lower costs for working families and seniors and combat climate change, including:
Lowering the Cost of Prescription Drugs and Health Care
- Enables Medicare to directly negotiate the price of prescription drugs with drug companies
- Caps out-of-pocket prescription drug costs at $2,000 per year for Medicare beneficiaries
- Caps insulin copays at $35 per month for Medicare beneficiaries
- Extends for three years the Affordable Care Act tax credits included in the American Rescue Plan that enabled 11,000 more people in the Second District and 95,000 people statewide to newly enroll in affordable health insurance plans.
Delivering the Largest Investment to Combat Climate Change in U.S. History
- Taken together, provisions in the bill will reduce carbon emissions by roughly 40 percent by 2030.
- Invests in domestic energy production and manufacturing, including:
- $27 billion to support deployment of technologies to reduce carbon emissions, especially in disadvantaged communities
- $5 billion to support healthy forests, forest fire resiliency, forest conservation and urban tree planting
- $3 billion to support the purchase and installation of zero-emission equipment and technology at ports like the Port of Everett
- $3 billion for the U.S. Postal Service to purchase zero-emission vehicles
- $2.6 billion to conserve and restore coastal habitats around Puget Sound and other marine ecosystems
- $1 billion for cleaner heavy-duty vehicles like school and transit buses and garbage trucks
- $300 million to speed up production and adoption of cleaner aviation fuel
- Consumers will receive discounts for electric vehicles at the point of sale, rather than waiting for a tax credit rebate.
Lowering the Deficit and Making Biggest Corporations Pay Their Fair Share
- Makes a historic down payment on deficit reduction of approximately $300 billion
- Strengthens IRS enforcement against wealthy tax cheats and closes tax loopholes exploited by the wealthiest few
- Implements a 15 percent corporate minimum tax – which applies only to the 150 corporations earning over $1 billion in profits that pay less than 15 percent in taxes
For more information on the Inflation Reduction Act, click here.
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I got very excited when I read this headline. I have a family member who has had several serious medical issues over the last few years, and I often reach my out of pocket maximum of $15,000 per year on health care bills, on top of my annual health insurance premiums of $14,000 per year for our family of four. So “Lowering the cost of healthcare for working families” got my attention. But, when you read the article, it’s actually only lowering costs of healthcare if you use Medicare, which of course most “working families” aren’t on. Just another mis-leading, “tooting their own horn” statement from a governor who has not actually done ANYTHING for working class people. I’d love to hear from someone in the governors office how this bill actually does what they claim. I suppose they’re hoping that we only read the headlines, not the whole statement, and just give them credit for something they didn’t actually do.
Buddy, if you read the article carefully, it’s from Rick Larsen about what the federal government, not the governor, is hoping to do.
Yeah, I got that it was a federal program, but Rick is taking credit for, and I quote:
“Today, Rep. Rick Larsen (WA-02) voted to lower the cost of healthcare and prescription drugs for working families”.
So, next time he campaigns he will claim to have helped working families with health care costs, which, like I said, seems untrue and disingenuous. But, it will make for a nice sound byte on the evening news, and people will believe that he did that.
Yes, Buddy, Rick is a slippery one who likes to take credit for a lot of things he was not involved in.