In Congress, Jared will fight to expand Medicare and protect Social Security. He will also work to protect and expand the Affordable Care Act.
In Congress, Jared Moskowitz will fight to expand Medicare, protect Social Security, and protect and expand the Affordable Care Act.
Occurrences
In Congress, he is fighting to expand Medicare, protect Social Security, and reduce prescription drug costs. He is also working to protect and expand the Affordable Care Act.
Evidence
Congress.gov shows H.R. 82 became Public Law No. 118-273 on 2025-01-05, repealing provisions that reduce Social Security benefits, including the government pension offset and windfall elimination provision.
Moskowitz's office says he joined bipartisan legislation to expand Medicare to cover hearing aids and associated examinations, and says it is past time that Medicare expand care for seniors.
Moskowitz said the GOP budget bill would increase premiums for Floridians who get coverage through the Affordable Care Act, and he voted against the bill; the post also says he signed onto the Hands Off Medicaid and SNAP Act to force a vote against benefit cuts.
Assessments
Moskowitz took same-term congressional action on all major parts of the promise: he cosponsored or supported an enacted Social Security protection bill, joined legislation to expand Medicare hearing-aid coverage, and voted against a budget bill his office identified as raising ACA premiums while also supporting a discharge effort against benefit cuts. Because the promise was framed as a commitment to fight for these policies rather than a guarantee that every expansion would be enacted, the documented legislative and voting record is sufficient for delivery in the federal House context.
Moskowitz delivered part of the promise by cosponsoring/supporting H.R. 82, which became law and protected Social Security benefits by repealing WEP/GPO reductions. The Medicare and ACA portions show meaningful same-term advocacy, including joining Medicare hearing-aid coverage legislation and opposing ACA-related premium increases and benefit cuts, but the evidence does not show enacted Medicare expansion or ACA expansion. Because the full multi-part promised outcome was not achieved, the best overall rating is partial, with an effort badge for serious attempts on the undelivered health-care components.