A $50 million push hopes to make child care a top issue in the midterm elections - AP News
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A coalition is spending $50 million to make child care a central midterm election issue.
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A coalition is spending $50 million to elevate child care as a central issue in the midterm elections. The investment underscores how child care costs and availability have become flash points in American politics, affecting working families across income levels and touching on both economic policy and family welfare debates. By dedicating significant resources to the issue ahead of midterms, the group aims to force candidates to take concrete positions on affordable child care rather than treating it as a secondary concern. Child care policy typically divides along partisan lines, with Democrats generally pushing for expanded federal subsidies and Republicans emphasizing market-based solutions and parental choice. The push suggests organizers believe child care can move voters in key races where the issue resonates with suburban and working-class families.
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