AARP Virginia urges lawmakers on drug costs and paid leave

AARP Virginia has announced its 2026 legislative priorities, with volunteer advocates set to press lawmakers when the General Assembly convenes on January 14. The agenda focuses on reducing prescription drug prices, establishing paid family and medical leave, and enhancing protections for older residents. Key proposals include creating a board to cap high-cost medication payments and streamlining access to home care services.

AARP Virginia's volunteer advocates plan to lobby state lawmakers as the General Assembly begins its session on January 14, pushing for measures to address key challenges faced by older residents and caregivers.

At the top of the agenda is lowering prescription drug costs. The organization backs a bill to establish a Prescription Drug Affordability Board empowered to set upper payment limits on select high-cost drugs. This initiative would build on recent federal reforms enabling Medicare to negotiate reduced prices, extending those benefits to Virginians outside Medicare. "Too many people can’t afford lifesaving medications because the confusing prescription drug pipeline prioritizes profit over patients," stated Jim Dau, AARP Virginia State Director. He emphasized the need for fairness, adding, "We are working hard to put fairness and accountability into the system because medication only works if people can afford it." Additional strategies include boosting transparency in the drug supply chain, promoting bulk purchasing, and regulating pharmacy benefit managers.

The group also seeks paid family and medical leave, noting that over 1.5 million Virginians—about a quarter of the adult population—act as caregivers, with 57% employed. Broader priorities encompass streamlining Medicaid eligibility for home and community-based services, mandating adequate staffing and accountability in nursing homes, and codifying the Uniform Health Care Decisions Act to update advanced care planning laws.

Further items include equalizing age discrimination protections under the Virginia Human Rights Act, raising the minimum Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefit from $23 to $50 monthly, and reducing the employee threshold for Virginia’s RetirePath retirement savings program from 25 to five. Housing efforts involve extending the renter pay-or-quit period from five to 14 days, empowering localities to negotiate affordable units in new assisted living projects, and ensuring the affordable housing supply matches demand.

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Wisconsin voters in a grocery store examining high food prices, highlighting affordability concerns for the 2026 election.
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Wisconsin voters put affordability at the center of 2026 race

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In the swing state of Wisconsin, affordability is top of mind for many voters. A recent NPR/PBS News/Marist poll found that nearly six in ten voters nationally say President Trump's top priority should be lowering prices, and that concern is being voiced loudly in Wisconsin.

Federal support for family caregivers remains stalled, but state-level initiatives are gaining traction to ease the burden on millions of Americans. In a recent Senate speech, New Jersey Democrat Andy Kim highlighted the personal and financial toll of caregiving for his father with Alzheimer's. Advocates point to growing awareness and policy experiments as signs of potential national change.

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The U.S. Senate on December 11, 2025, failed to advance two partisan proposals aimed at addressing rising health insurance costs on the Affordable Care Act marketplaces before enhanced federal subsidies expire at year’s end. Democrats pushed a three-year extension of the subsidies, while Republicans backed redirecting federal assistance into health savings accounts, but neither bill secured the 60 votes needed to move forward, leaving millions of Americans facing steep premium increases without further congressional action.

Deputies adopted an amendment on Friday making public the real prices of reimbursable drugs and discounts granted by pharmaceutical companies to the state. This measure, pushed by the ecologist group, aims to strengthen democratic oversight of social security spending. The government opposed it, fearing higher costs.

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President Donald Trump unveiled his 'Great Healthcare Plan' via social media video, focusing on drug prices and insurance reforms but ignoring rising Affordable Care Act premiums. The announcement comes as Senate negotiations on extending expired ACA subsidies falter, with enrollment deadlines looming. A House bill to extend the subsidies passed last week despite Republican opposition.

After weeks of stalemate over expiring Affordable Care Act premium tax credits, a Democratic-led discharge petition reached the crucial 218 signatures—with help from four House Republicans—clearing the way for a House vote on a clean three‑year extension of enhanced subsidies that are set to lapse at year’s end.

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As national Democrats elevate an “affordability” message heading into the 2026 midterms, two candidates running in deep-red rural territory say the pitch can fall flat unless the party also invests in organizing and long-shot races that rarely draw national attention.

 

 

 

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