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1. TIME 2017年7月24日号

Activists are counting on the emo- tional appe al Of their stories tO continue tO sway Senators. "HOW dO you as a Re- publican lawmaker counter the argument 'My child is sick and will die if you pass this bill'? ” says Dana R. Fisher, a profes- sor ofsociology at the University 0fMary- land whO studies protest and social move- ments. "lt's extremely dffcult tO pivot on that into any kind of political speak that doesn't make you sound like an a--hole. ” That's why groups like the Little Lob- byists have been pounding the pavement on Capit01 Hill. "We're not going to wait until there's a bill passed t0 speak up, says the group's co-founder Elena Hung, whose 3-year-01d daughter Xiomara was born with airway problems, chronic lung and kidney diseases and developmental delays. "lf we wait to speak up, it'll be tOO late. ” THE TRACH MOMMAS' 25-hour drive version 0f the Senate bill in mid-July, all from LouiS1ana was not easy. But after signs pointed toward a similar proposal several panic attacks, feeding-tube mis- tO what had come before. Concessions tO h 叩 s and one little girl who spiked a fever Republican critics ofthe bill included an and had to go to the ER, the group made expected $ 45 billion pot ofmoney t0 fight it tO the Hart Senate Off1ce Building on opioid addiction. McConnell also signaled July 10. Theyhad an appointment to meet awillingness t0 drop his earlier plan t0 cut with a staffer for Bill Cassidy, a Republi- Obamacare's taxes on the wealthy. hemophilia, sealed his opposition to the can Senator from their home state WhO These changes are unlikely t0 satisfy bill. "Seeing those folks and hearing those is pushing for a compromise on health the newly activated parents and patients, stories and seeing the dffculties that care that would allow some states tO keep who have been shaping the debate around families are going through really fortified Obamacare. Once there, Michot and Lorio the bills since the GOP's first health plan my beliefthat I was doing the right thing,' were told the staffer no longer had time was proposed in the House this spring ・ Donovan tells TIME. t0 speak t0 them in person but could do As the details of that plan emerged, After 75 people protested outside the a phone call later. The moms refused t0 town-hall meetings turned so angry that offlce of ・ West Virginia Republican Sena- leave , and eventually a member 0f Cas- many Republicans have all but stopped tor SheIIey Moore Capito on June 26 , she sidy's health care team appeared. She holding them. patient activists occupied announced that she could not support the nodded politely as Lori0 and Mich0t ex- the offlces of Arizona Senator Jeff Flake Senate bill ⅲ its initial form. "I only see plained what drastic Medicaid cuts would and C010rado Senator Cory Gardner it through the lens of a vulnerable popu- mean for John Paul and Gabriel. Within over the July 4 recess, and nearly 50 lation who needs help, who I care about 10 minutes, the meeting was over. protesters in wheelchairs were arrested very deeply; ” she later told Politico. StiII, the Mommas saw the trip as a for protesting outside McConnell's offce success: a face-to-face meeting With a on June 22. The TV star Jimmy Kimmel, Cassidy stafferwas their goal all along. But 'The party that whose young son Billy was born with a they were far from celebrating. They still congenital heart condition, used his late- owed the bus company more than $ 5 , 000 would have night show in May tO urge lawmakers to for the journey t0 D. C. And despite all crucified me for consider the impact an ACA repeal could their efforts, the Senate bill or another one have on seriously ill children. just like it, they knew, could still pass. lfit aborting my child These protests have shakenlawmakers. does become law, LoriO may enter another now wants tO make Sustained local advocacy ahead of the phase 0f political transformation. She House vote helped t0 sway many ofthe 20 says she won't vote for any RepubIican— it impossible for me Republicans who did not support the bill. from her local representative to Trump— tO keep him alive. ' New York RepubIican Dan Donovan says if they act to cut Medicaid. But she'll still hearing from concerned constituents, like be friends with Michot. —With reporting ALISON CHANDRA, mother Of 3- yea 「 -0 旧 Ethan, a family whose three children all have by KATIE REILLY/NEW YORK ロ whO has nine congenital heart defects 38 TIME JulY24, 2017 田 e も ob 妙な ts co-founders Michelle Mo ⅲ so 0 れ t , 0 れ d E 厄〃 Hung, 尹 , meet with Senator Chris Va れ日 0 〃 e onJune 20 about health care BELLA LUCY—VOX

2. TIME 2017年7月24日号

alliance of major medical and industry groups, including the American Medical Association, the AARP and the American Hospital Association, are fighting t0 safe- guard those same programs. ln the second week of July alone, the AARP and Save My Care, an advocacy group, spent nearly $ 2 million on broadcast, cable and radio spots targeting Republican Senators on the health care bill, according to Adver- tising Analytics, which tracks such spend- ing. A handful 0f Republican governors, including Nevada's Brian Sandoval, Ohi0's JOhn Kasich and Massachusetts' Charlie Baker, have crossed the aisle to oppose the first version ofthe Senate health care bill. ln attempting t0 make both sides happy, Republican lawmakers have spent the past few months performing some- thing of a wobbling dance. The House passed a version Ofa new health care law ⅲ May, which would reduce federal Medi- caid spending by more than $ 800 billion over 10 years, compared with current law. lt effectively removed the signature Obamacare requireme nt that insurance companies Offer coverage at similar rates tO everyone, regardless Of pre-existing conditions. The nonpartisan CongreSS10- nal Budget Offce estimated that the bill would leave 23 million more people with- out insurance after a decade, compared with current law. Trump championed the House bill in a televised Rose Garden cer- emony, then later described it as "mean. Senate Republicans have followed a similar tack. Their draft, which borrowed Pastor James Richard Burr— not tO vote for any measure heavily 仕 om the House plan, cut federal that would affect the state Medicaid Brigman Jr. , 52 Medicaid spending by $ 772 billion over program that covers Lauren Faith'S care. 10 years, allowed states tO opt out Of re- "Lauren is never going tO get any bet- HOW HEALTH CARE AFFECTS HIM quiring insurers tO cover basic ter; ” Brigman says. "She can't walk, SO I Brigman's daughter Lauren Faith, 9 , benefits such as maternity care or pre- walk for her. She can't stand, so I stand for weighed less than 2 わ . when she scription drugs , and eliminated the bulk her. She can't speak, so I speak for her. ” was born. She survived, but she has of the Ob amac are taxes on wealthy Amer- cerebral palsy and a seizure disorder. The Brigman family is covered by North icans. The CBO estimated the bill would THIS IS NOT the place Republicans ex- CaroIina's Cap/C program, which relies leave 22 million Americans without insur- pected t0 be ⅲ . Having campaigned for on Medicaid fundingto provide home ance by 2026 compared tO current law. TO seven years on a promise tO repeal the care tO severely disabled kids. patient advocates, any bill resembling the ACA and claw back federal spending, House plan iS a nonstarter. seen WHAT HE'S DOING ABOUT the party is at last in a position tO deliver. Brigman is walking about 350 miles three versions of this bill—all of them lnstead, they've been thwarted by an in- from his home in Rockingham, N. C. , tO would be devastating for our kids," says creasingly pitched, internecine battle confront his Senators in Washington. MicheIIe Morrison, who has brought her over the future of the GOP brand. He estimates that thejourney will 6-year-01d son Timmy t0 C 叩 it01 Hill half On one side, conservative lawmakers take him tWO weeks, and he says he a dozen times as part Of a group she CO- plans tO pray along the way. ・ Are they and powerful benefactors like the Koch going tO stick with a political party?" founded called Little Lobbyists. "Unless brothers are pushing tO eliminate regula- he says Of his elected officials. "Or are they do a complete 180 from what they've tions and reduce outlays t0 programs like they going tO dO what's right fO 「 the been doing, it's going t0 be bad. ” Medicaid. On the other side, constituents American people?" As McConnell prepared t0 unveil anew like the Trach Mommas and a powerful 3 々 宝 3 第 37

3. TIME 2017年7月24日号

A threat to that care has away ofchang- ing things ・ Maggie Chism says she didn't get involved in politic s until her daughter Evelyn was born with a congenital heart defect 10 months ago. Now she's calling and writing letters to McConnell, who rep - resents her in Kentucky. ROCky Fuselier, a 54-year-01d Trump voter from Louisiana wh0 was paralyzed ⅲ a diving accident when he was 19 , traveled tO Washington tO advocate for continued funding Ofpro- grams that help dis able d adults live inde- pendent lives. Laurie Merges, a 47-year- Old mother in OhiO, says she was never the type tO chant and march—until she was diagnosed with Stage 3 breast cancer shortly after she went on Medicaid follow- ing the expansion 0f the program under the Affordable Care Act. They are among tens Of thousands Of newly engaged patients and their loved ones whO were fighting tO save Obama- care. The American Diabetes Association estimates that it has 15 , 000 new patient activists this year. The American Cancer Society's Cancer Action Network says it has logged 19 , 000 new advocates since January. "NOW we go tO protests; ” says Kerry Reed, 46 , a Tennessee mom and longtime Republican voter whO switched tO Clinton in 2016 and has been covered under the ACA since 2014. She had rarely gotten involved in politics, but she's now placing daily calls t0 her Senator and writ- ing letters t0 the editor ofher local paper. "I know you think you're a Republican; ” she tells her neighbors, "but this new care is going t0 affect you. " Exactly how the Senate's latest pro- posals will affect disabled and chroni- cally ill kids and adults will vary by state and by the type 0f insurance families have. But experts agree that the heart Of the issue is Medicaid. BOth the House and the senate proposals include steep cuts to future funding for Medicaid, an over- whelmingly popular federal program that covers 76 million 、 Americans, including two-thirds of all nursing-ho me re sidents and 40 % of the nation's children. If you reduce federal Medicaid funding by as much as $ 834 billion over 10 years, as the House Republicans' bill would, states will almost certainly be forced tO cut some Of the services they currently 0 仟 er. Both the White House and congressio- nal Republicans wh0 support the Senate bill say scaling back spending on Medi- 4 4 2 Jessica Michot, is considering allowing more federal Medicaid spending for particular issues 33 , and Gabriel like the opioid epidemic—an attempt tO Mich0t, 4 draw reluctant Senators' votes. As the veteran Republican leader works t0 persuade enough 0f his col- leagues t0 get the hobbled bill over the line, advocates like the Trach Mommas and Other patients and parents across the countrywill be rallying the opposition be- hind a deeply personal cause. "This isn't about parties and hOW you voted," LoriO says. "This is about saving lives. ” P 02L LIKE LoriO and Michot don't re- ally have time tO be activists. For parents of kids with complex medical needs or chro nically ill adults , even go ing t0 the grocery store can be a heavy lift. Wh0 has the extra hours it takes tO organize a rally when there's a child at home who needs round-the-clock care? HOW HEALTH CARE AFFECTS THEM Gabriel and his twin Michael were born at 27 weeks and spent more than a yearin a Baton Rouge neonatal intensive care unit. Michael died at age 1 , while Gabriel survived with bronchopulmonary dysplasia, hypertensive pulmonary vascular disease and developmental delays. His family has private insurance, but GabrieI's care is SO expensive that if lifetime caps on coverage return, he could be uninsurable in the future. WHAT THEY'RE DOING ABOUT 」 essica Michot led a bus full offamilies with disabled children tO Washington tO urge Senators tO preserve Medicaid funding. alreadylost one son," she says. don't intend tO lose another. 35

4. TIME 2017年7月24日号

caid, which has grown to roughly 10 % of the federal budget, is necessary. Such reductions, Republicans say, will force states tO become more effcient, elimi- nate fraud and abuse, and serve the most deserving populations first. But health care experts say it will alSO compel states tO make some tough decisions. Federal law requires that all state Medicaid pro- grams cover certaln populations, like im- poverished children, disabled children and adults , mothers and the indigent el- derly ⅲ need 0f nursing-home care , and certain services, like hospital care. AS a result, states don't have easy ways tO cut large amounts 0f Medica1d spending with out targeting optional programs. That in- cludes one ofthe most expensive: the one that helps defray the cost of home aides and medical equipment that help severely disabled children and adults stay ⅲ their homes and communities, rather then being institutionalized. "lf you have a disabled child and Medi- caid has paid for a personal care atten- dant tO come tO your house SO your kid can get combed and bathed and you can have a shower—thatwill probablybe cut,' says Andy Slavitt, the former acting ad- ministrator Of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, a federal health agency. "Which means a 10t more people will be institutionalized. ” Home and community care programs are, after all, very expensive, accounting for more than 25 % ofall Medicaid spend- ing over the past decade, according tO a 2016 federal government analysis. But they're alSO transformative for families caring for disabled family members and children. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health policy think tank, 44 % of kids with special needs across the U. S. rely on Medicaid or other public insurance through state programs like these. Both Lorio and Michot depend on Louisiana's Medicaid programs tO get the trach supplies, home health aides and medical equipment that allow their 4-year-old sons tO remain at home. NO politician wants tO be responsible for kicking sick kids out of their homes. But reductions in Medicaid spending will force governors tO make excruciating de- cisions, explains David Cutler, a health care economist at Harvard University. And that means excruciating choices: DO you cut services for children, or pre- 36 TIME July 24 , 2017 natal visits, or the amount paid for nurs- ing homes for the elderly? "State budgets are t00 strapped already; ” Cutler says. Congressional Republicans wh0 sup- port the Senate bill say they have created safeguards for some Of the most vulner- able populations. Those include exemp- tions for disabled people from needing to work in order tO receive assistance and a carve-out for blind and disabled children, which would allow them to avoid being subject tO certain limits on federal spend- ing. "That's awell-intentioned provision, but you have to read closely; ” says Meg Comeau, a director at BOSton University's Catalyst Center, which has analyzed the Republican health plan. WhiIe the description of the carve- out in the first Senate bill lacks detail, it will likely narrowly define what counts as a disability and may only 叩 ply to chil- dren whO qualify under the stringent in- come standards of the federal disability program. lt's possible, for example, that both John Paul Lorio, who has Medicaid coupled with other optional state-based programs, and Gabriel Mich0t, wh0 has private insurance through his father's em- ployerbut also receives Medicaid-funded optional programs even though his family is above the income limit, could see the services they receive scaled back, elimi- nated or made more expensive through cost-sharing measures. Patients and advocates are also alarmed by the GOP's proposal to allow insurance companies tO reinstate the lifetime cover- age c 叩 s thatwere banned under the ACA. Without thatban on lifetime caps in place, people with complex medical needs who are covered by private insurance could blowthrough the limit on how much their insurers will pay after a prolonged stay at 'Seeing the diffculties that familie s are go ing through really fortified my belief that I was dOing the right thing. ' DAN DONOVAN, Republican Congressman from New York, who voted against the GOP health care bill in the House the hospital, leaving them essentially un- insurable for the rest Of their lives—un- less they reduce their income enough tO qualify for Medicaid. Take Timmy Morri- son, for example. He was born on Sept. 29 , 2010 , with a rare genetic condition called Opitz G/BBB syndrome, six days after the ACA's ban on lifetime caps went into ef- fect. He spent six months in the NICU, racking up a bill ofmore than $ 2 million, according tO his mother, Michelle Morri- son. IfTimmy had been born six months earlier, the $ 1 million cap on Morrison's employer-based insurance policy would have le 代 him without coverage halfway through his NICU stay. Some parent-advocates have seen the GOP stance on health care as a reason t0 question their party identity. Alison Chandra, who considered herself a Re- publican because 0f the party's position on abortion, finds it hard tO square that value for life with the GOP health care proposals. "l've always seen it as very black and white, like the RepubIicans are pro-life and l'm pro-life, so I guess l'm a Republican; ” says Chandra, 33 , a former pediatric nurse in New Jersey Whose son Ethan, 3 , has heterotaxy, a rare condition that caused him tO be born with nine con- genital heart defects, two le 仕 lungs and five spleens. While Chandra and Ethan are covered under her husband's employer- based insurance, the return Of lifetime cap s would render Ethan virtually unin- surable. His care has already cost almost $ 2 million injust three years. "The party that would have crucified me for aborting my child nowwants t0 make it impossible for me t0 keep him alive; ” she says. So Chandra has added political ac- tion intO her daily routine Of c aring for Ethan. "Here's my list: call the insurance company, call Congress, and then call the pharmacy and get the prescription re- filled' ” Chandra says. "We've been fight- ing since the moment we heard our kid's diagnosis, since the moment they were born. This is just a regular day for us. Pastor James Brigman Jr. is taking that fight on the road. On July 7 , he set out from his home in Rockingham, N. C. , with water, a Bible and pictures 0fhis daughter Lauren Faith, 9 , who has cerebral palsy and uncontrollable seizures. lt will take him almost two weeks to walk the roughly 350 miles to Capitol Hill to ask his Senators—Republicans Thom Tillis and

5. TIME 2017年7月24日号

Angéla L 〇 riO never th 〇 ught she w 〇 uld have a friend like Jessica Mich 〇 t. L 〇 riO is a Republican wh 〇 〇 nce trained tO be a nun. Mich 〇 t is a Dem 〇 crat wh 〇 went t 〇 sch 〇 OI t 〇 be a social W 〇 rker. LoriO watches F 〇 x News; Michot watches MSNBC. L 〇 ri 〇 v 〇 ted f 〇 r D 〇 nald Trump. Mich 〇 t was for Hillary Clint 〇 n all the way. But the two Louisiana moms, whO live Just a dozen miles apart, were drawn tO each other by a force stronger than poli- tics. They met in 2013 , after discovering on Facebook that they had overlapped for months in a Baton Rouge neonatal intensive care unit, praying over tiny beds. Lori0's son John Paul and Michot's son GabrieI were born at 27 weeks, which led tO severe problems that require them to eat through feeding tubes and breathe through "trachs. ” B0th boys, now 4 , also have developmental delays, and their mothers rely on Medicaid t0 defray the COSts Of caring for their sons at home. LoriO and Michot connected immedi- ately over shared experiences—cleaning trachs, mixing formula, inserting feeding tubes—and they soon launched a group for parents like them. They called it Trach Mommas Of Louisiana. "This is the 6 t time l've had a very close friend that was on the other end 0f the [political] spec- 34 TIME July 24 , 2017 trum," says Lori0, 43 , wh0 cares for J0hn Paul full-time. "We can look in another mom's eyes and say, 'l've been there. ' That's what unites us. NOW, as Trump and the Republican- controlled Congress work tO overhaul America's health care policy, LoriO and Michot find themselve s united for another reason: bOth n101 れ S are committed tO stopping the Senate Republicans' health 'We're not going tO wait until there's a bill passed t0 speak up. If we wait tO speak up, it'll be too late. ' ELENA HUNG, mother Of Xiomara, 3 , WhO uses a trach tube tO breathe care plan, which they see as a direct threat to their children's welfare. Of particular concern iS a provision in a Senate draft proposal that would allow insurance companies tO impose lifetime caps on benefits, which could make seriously ill patients essentially uninsurable in the private market. LoriO and Michot also oppose a projected 35 % reduction over two decades in federal funding for Medicaid, which they fear would force states tO eliminate the programs that help parents ofdisabled children care for their kids at home. "They will be cutting offhis life support; ” Mich0t, 33 , says of Gabriel. "Without Medicaid, he would either be dead or institutionalized. ” SO onJuly 8 , Lori0 and Mich0t set 0ffin a bus んⅡ of wheelchairs and ventilators to Washington, where they joined more than 100 Other parents, patients and advocates for the chronically ill and disabled to pro- test the health care proposal. They were a motley trib e : Trump voters and ClintO n backers, children with oxygen tanks and adults with autism, experienced rabble- rousers and political neophytes. Some had never called their Senators' offces, much less showed up on their doorsteps. But tO- gether, these dedicated activists amount tO a powerful new constituency, one that is homegrown, bipartisan and mobilized behind a single issue: tO protect access tO federal health care benefits. This unlikely grassroots army is a key reason the Republican Party finds itself with few good options on health care, despite controlling b0th houses 0f Con- gress and the White House. As GOP law- makers attempt tO deliver on promises t0 repeal Obamacare and reduce federal entitlements, while simultaneously serv- ing constituents whO rely on those very programs, the result has been a series Of health care bills, first out ofthe House and now the Senate, that appear tO satisfy Ⅱ 0 one. The House bill, which passed in May, is the most unpopular legislation in three decades, according tO an MIT analysis Of public-opinion polls, receiving support from just 28 % ofvoters. The backlash led Senate majority leader Mitch McConneII t0 postpone a VOte on the Senate's version at the end 0f June. On July 11 he announced that the Senate would stay in session an extra tWO weeks intO August tO get the jOb done. The proposed revisions McConneII

6. TIME 2017年7月24日号

lnstead, Trump is said t0 have turned Republicans were willing to defend the on his lawyers, blaming longtime personal Trump camp when the email chain went attorney Marc Kasowitz for the team's fail- public. ure tO put an end tO his woes. Adding tO Their silence pointed tO the one their burden, the lawyers have been ham- measuring stick that Trump hasn't yet strung by a deliberate decision inside the broken: the voters. The year 2016 ー the White House to avoid an internal investi- year Of Trump's unexpected victory—is gation. Fearing the bad odor that news 0f receding as quickly as 2018 approaches, an inquiry could create, the Administra- and members of the GOP must decide tion has not asked individual staffers to produce lists Of their contacts with Rus- leader in their next campaigns. This is sians during the campaign and trans ition. a delicate calculation. Polling suggests Such lists are an invitation tO nitpicking a deepening determination among core by the press and investigators, one White Republicans t0 shut out what they're Hous e offlcial noted, but the alternative hearing from established institutions. is no better. Without asking for lists, the Strong majorities on the right express Administration is flY1ng blind, unsure skepticism, notJust Ofthe media but alSO whether their own statements will prove Of many government agencies, colleges true , j ust waiting for the next shoe tO drop. and universities. For them, the sound Of Trump's attorneys, meanwhile, hope established authorities howling over the emails might as well be music. But polls also make it clear that core hOW perilous his predicament has Republicans are not a maJ0rity in the U. S. become for him. The incriminating Trump's nationwidejob approval remains interplay between his son and a stuck at about 40 %. lfyou think ofelected potential business partner in Russia offcials as a needle wobbling between the points Mueller ever deeper intO the guts 0f the Trump Organization, which GOP base and persuadable independents, 0 you can watch them tO see hOW much po- Trump Jr. now runs with his brother litical damage is being done. So far, special Eric. ln hopes 0f limiting the damage, the lawyers, not tO mention some White elections in places like Georgia, Kansas House staffmembers, would love tO shut and South Carolinahave shown the needle down Trump's Twitter—but he made it tilting away from Trump, but not enough 0 clear in remarks tO the New York Times to lose him any Republican Congressmen. Magazine that this will never happen. "lt's my voice; ” he said. "They're not INSIDE THE 、 IT HOUSE, the mood going t0 take away my social media. was, once again, weary and grim. The lt all adds up, in the words 0f a senior President dropped from public view, Administration offcial, tO a "sh-tstorm ” surfacing briefly tO praise his son as that no White House staffer even tries high-quality person" and t0 tweet his ap- to deny. The #FakeNews defense won't proval 0fTrumpJr. Ha れⅲ収叩 pearance. work when the Trump family is the one "My son Donald did a goodjob last night. tweeting the potentially incriminating He was open, transparent and innocent. ” emails. And all 0f Washington has Sources describe the President as の 0 'frustrated" by the Russia mire—his mil- has spiraled beyond anyone's control. lions of online followers could tell you There are tOO many investigations and that—and he continues tO be unwilling tO t00 many targets—each with his own recognize that his impetuous and impro- interests tO protect and his 0 、Ⅵ 1 team visational actions are partly tO blame. lt Of attorneys tO protect the m— and tOO was his choice tO prais e Putin throughout many enemie s created by Trump's bull- the campaign, his whim t0 suggest that in-a-china-shop style. lt's not a question the Russians should hack Clinton's email, anymore ofputting them all ⅲ a box and his decision tO hire figures as Manafort 0 >— JARED KUSHNER shutting the lid. lt's only a question 0f and former National SecurityAdviser Mi- The son-in-law how bad it will get. —With reporting 妙 chael Flynn, and his impulse to fire Comey Now a White House senioradviser, he failed tO mention his presence atthe meetingwhen after a meeting ⅲ which the former FBI MASSIMO CALABRESI, ZEKE J. MILLER, applying for a security clearance MICHAEL SCHERER/WASHINGTON 0 れ d director says the President asked him tO 0 工 ロ dial down a part Ofthe investigation. SIMON SHUSTER/BERLIN 0 工 The Players 31

7. TIME 2017年7月24日号

UNITED PATIENTS OF AMERICA THE Health Care As Republicans scramble to replace Obamacare, families with sick or disabled members are emerging as a powerful opposition force By Charlotte Alter and HaIey Sweetland Edwards PHOTOGRAPH BY DAYMON GARDNER FOR TIME

8. TIME 2017年7月24日号

Angél a Lorio, 43 , and John Paul Lorio, 4 HOW HEALTH CARE A ドド ECTS THEM LO ⅱ 0 was uninsured when she gave birth to 」 ohn Paul at 27 weeks. He was born with tracheomalacia, intraventricular hemorrhage and developmental delays. They are now covered by Medicaid, which pays for the equipment and nursingthat allows 」 ohn PauIto live at home. WHAT THEY'RE DOING ABO 1 Even though she's a Republican whO voted forTrump, LoriO has organized sit-ins against the GOP'S proposed Medicaid cuts. "There's nothing like a mama bear coming at you fO 「 her cub," she says.

9. TIME 2017年7月24日号

The Brief 'AMERICANS ARE MORE LIKELY TO BE STRUCKBYLIGHTNING THAN COMMIT ELECTION FRAUD. ' —NEXT PAGE VRVÅG HERE Yo 町 0 YourV VOters cast early ballots ⅲ石れれ eapo 石 s in October 2016 His pursuer is one 0fthe leading MICHAEL HANNUM KNOWS WHAT IT'S defenders ofthe Republican Party like when Kris Kobach comes after beliefthat voter fraud is an epidemic. you. Last year, the Kansas secretary Of K0bach's zeal for the subject, and his state charged Hannum, a 65 -ye ar-old defense of DonaId Trump's unfounded retired molecular geneticist, with one claim that millions ofillegal votes were felony and three misdemeanor election cast for Hillary Clinton in 2016 , made violations, alleging that Hannum voted him the president's pick t0 spearhead in 2012 inJohnson County, Kansas, a House commission on where he lived, as well as Omaha, Neb. , election integrity, which will hold its where he visited his mother. first offcial meeting onJuly 19. Hannum says he doesn't recall VOt- The panel's tactics have already ing in Nebraska. If anything, he thinks drawn bipartisan criticism. Some states his then fiancée might have mailed an refused Kobach's request for detailed absentee ballot by mistake. But facing VOter data, including sensitive infor- a bulldog prosecutor and prison time, mation like Social Security numbers, he decided to plead guilty, paying a while others refused tO cooperate at $ 5 , 500 fine and twice that ⅲ legal all. The commission plans tO compare fees tO resolve the matter. "lt was databases tO study best practices and amazing hOW many resources went intO check for fraudulent registrations , then pursuing ” Hannum says. "ln my recommend ways tO strengthen the opinion, it was a political statement. POLITICS The GOP quest tO find voter fraud draws backlash By AIex AItman S39Vb•Nl A1139 、 d 」 V 5 PHOTOGRAPH BY STEPHEN MATUREN

10. TIME 2017年7月24日号

TIME VOL. 190 , 20 ; 4 ー 2017 す R U M P Text "TRUMP ” 88022 St. CIairsviIIe, OhiO MAKE AMER に A GREAT AGAIN! The View Time Off The Features 3 ー Conversation 4 ー For the Record During 0 rally What tO watch, read, in OhiO 0 れ see and dO れ e 28 , 2016 , 礒 e れ Republican 47 ー Summer presidential blockbuster: ca れ市 d e Do d Ⅳ r 工 br the れ et Trump, 厄瓦 oftheApes embraces hiS SO 〃 Do れ d TrumpJr. 5 例 An Oxford don on the perfect meal 2 gr 叩 h 妙 Patrick Semansky—AP 51 ー Susanna Schrobsdorffon whywomen should emulate Veep's SeIina Meyer 52 Questions for MalalaYousafzai ldeas, opinion, A New Kind of PM innovations lreland's Leo Varadkar represents a ユ引 The medical News from the し S. and global generational change and ethical dilemma around the Ⅳ 0 d ByJenniferDuggan 22 Of treating Charlie 5 IWhy opponents Gard, a brain- see the GOP's ロ The Bombshell damaged baby leading activist Of DonaIdJr. ?s emails bring new election fraud as a 2 例 How TheIma & urgency tO the investigation intO VOter suppressor Louise set out tO the Trump campaign's ties tO change H011ywood No good options Russia duringthe 2016 election onNorthKorea ByDavid VonDrehle 26 2 幻 BastiIIe Day's le sser-known ユ A global No Child Left Behind? peaceful beginnings leadership vacuum Parents ofsick and disabled kids unsettles the are emerging as a powerful force G -20 summit against the GOP's health care ユ Hong Kong and overhaul CharIotteAIterand Beijing, more 叩 art 日 SweetIandEdwards 32 than ever Get Moving ユ 4 llraq regains More reasons why exerclse equals control of Mosul from ISIS, but who strength and enlightenment 40 will win Baghdad? The Brief ONTHE COVER: TIMEphoto- illustration. Photograph JohnMoore— Getty lmages TIME Asia is published TIME Asia ( Ho (g) Limlted. TIME publishes eight double issues. Each as two of 52 issues in an annual subscnption. TIME may so publish extra issues. 0 2017 Time Asia ( HO (g) LimIted. 則 ri$ts reserved. Reproducüon in whole 0 「 in part without written permission is prohiblted. TIME and the Red Border Design are protected 物 rou trademark regstration in し S. and in the countries where TIME magazine circulates Member, Audit Bureau of Circulations. Su 0 員博 . lfthe postal services alertusthatyourmagazine is undeliverable, 、肥 havenofurtherobligation unless 、肥 recewea corrected addresswithintwoyears. CUSTOMERSERVICEANDSLBCRIPTIONS: ー 24 / 7s ⅵ , 併加厄 am n 和′ 0 a 臧 s 回面 ers 0 , l*eaæ忙わ年://n既wⅢine碼ー”u加.com/8′ⅶ8.pわp. You may 引 so email our Customer services center at 田期リ腕時@せれle”朝.* orcall ( 852 ) 312 & 5688 , 0 「 write to Time Asia (Hong Kong) Limited, 3 〃 0 対 Ord House, TaikOO 日 ace , 979 Kings Road, Quarry Bay, Hong Kong.In 」 apan,these areeれ4ⅵけ礎胸*@せれlæ可a.8E0 「 012066 236 (Free Dial) 0r2-51-27FA ね go , Minato-ku,Towo 105 石 227. Advertbing: Forinformation and rates, HO KongTelephone: ( 852 ) 312 & 5169. Orvisit: ゼn河iw.com/*ねk忙. Rqyint: lnformation is available at ゼ me. / 物 ne, / 肥 p 村 TO requestcustom reprints, ⅵ sit , 冶′ 0 m,n. M 物 t : 、 make a ⅲ on ofou 「 mailing list availableto reputablefirms. げ u would prefer that 、肥 not include u 「 name, please con ねは ou 「 Customer Services Center. TIME Asia is in Hong Kong and printed in Singa\I)re and Hong Kong. Singapore MCI (P) NO. 058 / 08 / 2016. Malaysia KKDN no. pps 676 / 03 / 2013 ( 022933 ). TIME July 24 , 2017 2