El-Sayed argues that the current healthcare landscape forces patients into impossible choices, specifically citing the plight of rural Michiganders who travel hours for basic cancer care. He contends that a single-payer system would stabilize struggling clinics by standardizing reimbursement rates, ensuring that facilities remain open regardless of a patient's background. During his 'We Can Do Better' tour, he has frequently contrasted the claimed unaffordability of universal healthcare with the massive, multi-trillion-dollar budgets approved for military spending.
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Abdul El-Sayed Puts Medicare for All at Center of Michigan Senate Bid
Former Detroit health official Abdul El-Sayed launched his first television ad in the Michigan US Senate primary this week, doubling down on a platform anchored by Medicare for All. Joined by Sen. Bernie Sanders, the candidate frames the single-payer system as a vital lifeline for rural residents and working families.

His primary opponents, state Sen. Mallory McMorrow and US Rep. Haley Stevens, have taken different paths, with McMorrow questioning public appetite for a government-run system and Stevens advocating for a public option. El-Sayed has sharpened his rhetoric against both, pointing to their history of accepting donations from the for-profit insurance industry. As the primary approaches, his campaign is betting that the economic pressures facing working-class voters—compounded by rising costs and shrinking subsidies—will make his aggressive stance on healthcare a winning strategy in the three-way race.
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