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flag A $50M campaign boosts child and elder care in 2026 midterms, stressing affordability's impact on voters and candidates.

flag A $50 million campaign by the Campaign for a Family Friendly Economy is targeting the 2026 midterms, pushing child and elder care as key issues in competitive races across seven states. flag It highlights rising care costs—often exceeding housing expenses—and their impact on the "sandwich generation," arguing these pressures influence voter decisions amid broader economic strain. flag The effort supports Democratic candidates advancing universal care and expanded subsidies, building on pandemic-era aid that has since expired, while Republicans focus on tax credits and fraud prevention, with limited legislative progress. flag Some candidates, including Zohran Mamdani and Mikie Sherrill, have made care affordability central to their platforms. flag Neither the White House nor HHS has commented.

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