‘Cancer doesn’t care’: Patients pushed past divisive politics to lobby Congress

Mary Catherine Johnson is a retired small-business owner from outside Rochester, New York. She voted for Donald Trump three times.

Lexy Mealing, who used to work in a physician’s office, is from Long Island, New York. She’s a Democrat.

But the two women share a common bond. They both survived breast cancer.

And when the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network organized its annual citizen lobby day in Washington, D.C., last month, Johnson and Mealing were among the more than 500 volunteers pushing Congress to keep cancer research and support for cancer patients at the top of the U.S. health care agenda.

An annual plea

The day in Washington is something of a ritual for groups like the cancer organization.

This year it came as Democrats and Republicans in Washington slid toward a budget impasse that has shut down the federal government indefinitely. But these volunteers transcended their own political differences and found common ground.

“Not one person here discussed if you’re a Democrat, if you’re a Republican,” says Mealing, one of 27 volunteers in the New York delegation. “Cancer doesn’t care.”

Every one of the volunteer lobbyists had been touched in some way by the deadly disease, which is expected to kill more than 600,000 people in the U.S. this year.

Volunteers with the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network from all 50 states decorated about 10,000 white paper bags with messages of hope and remembrance for people with cancer.
Volunteers with the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network from all 50 states decorated about 10,000 white paper bags with messages of hope and remembrance for people with cancer. (Charlotte Kesl for KFF Health News)

Johnson said each of her mother’s 10 siblings died from cancer, as did a lifelong friend who died at age 57, leaving behind his wife and two young daughters.

Like many of the New York volunteers, Johnson also says she’s worried about the state of politics today.

“I think we’re probably the most divided that we’ve ever been,” she says. “That scares me. Scares me for my grandchildren.”

Katie Martin, a volunteer from outside Buffalo, N.Y., also worries. She and her daughter recently drove past political protesters screaming at one another on the street.

 ”My daughter is silent and then starts asking, ‘What is this?’ And I don’t know how to explain it, because it doesn’t even make sense to me,” she says. “It’s very heartbreaking.”

Mealing says she can barely watch the news these days. “A lot of Americans are very stressed out. There’s a lot of things going on.”

Bipartisan support

Americans are indeed split over many issues: immigration, guns, President Trump. But helping people with cancer and other serious illnesses retains broad bipartisan support, polls show.

In one recent survey, 7 in 10 voters said it’s very important for the federal government to fund medical research. That included majorities of Democrats and Republicans.

“It’s rare in today’s environment to see numbers like that,” says Jarrett Lewis, a Republican pollster who conducted the survey for patient groups. “But almost everybody in this country knows somebody who’s had cancer.”

Similarly, a recent KFF poll found that three-quarters of U.S. adults, including most Republicans who align with the MAGA movement, want Congress to extend subsidies that help Americans buy health insurance through Affordable Care Act marketplaces. (KFF is a health information nonprofit that includes KFF Health News.)

These subsidies, which are critical to people with chronic illnesses such as cancer, are one of the main sticking points in the current budget impasse in Congress.

As the volunteers gathered in a conference hotel in Washington, they focused on their shared agenda: increasing funding for cancer research, retaining insurance subsidies and expanding access to cancer screening.

“We may not see eye to eye politically. We might not even see eye to eye in social circumstances,” said Martin, the Buffalo-area volunteer. “But we can see beyond those differences because we’re here for one cause.”

The state delegations practiced the pitches they would make to their members of Congress. They ran through the personal stories they would share. And they swapped tips for how to deal with resistant staff and how to ask for a photo with a lawmaker.

On the morning of their lobby day, Sept. 16, they reconvened in a cavernous ballroom, all decked out in matching blue polo shirts and armed with red information folders to leave at each office they would visit.

They got a pep talk from a pair of college basketball coaches. Then they headed across town to Capitol Hill.

The army of volunteers — from every state in the country — hit 484 of the 535 Senate and House offices.

Not every visit was an unqualified victory. Many Republican lawmakers object to extending the insurance subsidies, arguing they’re too costly.

But lawmakers from both parties have backed increased research funding and support for more cancer screening.

And the New Yorkers felt good about the day. “It was amazing,” Mealing said as the day wrapped up. “You could just feel the sense of, ‘Everybody stronger together.'”

Memorials and lessons

When evening came, the volunteers met on the National Mall for a candlelight vigil. It was raining. Bagpipes played.

Around a pond near the Lincoln Memorial, some 10,000 tea lights glimmered in little paper bags. Each luminary had a name on it — a life touched by cancer.

John Manna, another New Yorker, is a self-described Reagan Republican whose father died from lung cancer. He reflected on lessons that this day could offer a divided nation.

An illuminated sign says 'HOPE' on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., part of an annual event organized by the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network to bring the needs of cancer patients to the attention of lawmakers. A steady rain fell on this year's evening vigil.
An illuminated sign says “HOPE” on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., part of an annual event organized by the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network to bring the needs of cancer patients to the attention of lawmakers. A steady rain fell on this year’s evening vigil. (Charlotte Kesl for KFF Health News)

“Talk to people,” he said. “Get to know each other as people, and then you can understand somebody’s positions.  We have little disagreements, but, you know, we don’t attack each other. We talk and discuss it.”

Manna said he would be back next year.

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.

Transcript:

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

Republicans and Democrats can’t agree on how to reopen the U.S. government. But hundreds of volunteers with the advocacy arm of the American Cancer Society put political differences aside when they came to Washington, D.C., to lobby Congress. Noam Levey with our partners KFF Health News has the story.

NOAM LEVEY: The professional lobbyists in expensive shoes are filing into the Cannon House Office Building as a group of New York citizens circle up on the sidewalk outside. They’re about to visit their congressman’s office, and there’s just enough time for a final rehearsal.

UNIDENTIFIED VOLUNTEER #1: On this paper, it says the messaging, we appreciate the congressman. This is a first step. We are urging Congress to act now.

UNIDENTIFIED VOLUNTEER #2: So do you feel comfortable with this?

UNIDENTIFIED VOLUNTEER #1: Yeah. So I’ll just read the…

UNIDENTIFIED VOLUNTEER #3: Just read it.

UNIDENTIFIED VOLUNTEER #1: …Whole thing.

UNIDENTIFIED VOLUNTEER #3: Just read it.

UNIDENTIFIED VOLUNTEER #1: OK.

UNIDENTIFIED VOLUNTEER #3: Yeah.

LEVEY: The cancer volunteers are a microcosm of America – old and young, Black and white, Democrat and Republican. But they share a common bond – cancer. Mary Catherine Johnson is a retiree from outside Rochester in Upstate New York.

MARY CATHERINE JOHNSON: My mom lost all of her 10 siblings to cancer. My lifelong friend succumbed to lung cancer at the age of 57.

LEVEY: Johnson herself survived breast cancer. She’s worried about the state of our politics.

JOHNSON: I think we’re probably the most divided that we’ve ever been, and that scares me. It scares me for my grandchildren.

LEVEY: Katie Martin, a cancer volunteer from Buffalo, also worries. She and her daughter recently drove past political protesters screaming at one another on the street.

KATIE MARTIN: My daughter is silent and then starts asking, like, what is this? And I don’t know how to explain it ’cause it doesn’t even make sense to me sometimes.

LEVEY: Lexy Mealing, who lives on Long Island and, like Johnson, had breast cancer, says she can barely watch the news these days.

LEXY MEALING: A lot of Americans are very stressed out. There’s a lot of things going on.

LEVEY: Mealing is a Democrat. Johnson voted for Donald Trump three times. Martin didn’t want to discuss her politics.

MARTIN: I wish that there was a safer question.

LEVEY: But political affiliation wasn’t important as the volunteers gathered in Washington. Here’s Mealing again.

MEALING: Not one person here discussed if you’re a Democrat, if you’re a Republican, because cancer doesn’t care.

LEVEY: The volunteers spent hours together practicing the pitches they’d make to members of Congress. On the morning of their Hill visits, they packed into a hotel ballroom.

UNIDENTIFIED VOLUNTEER #4: I think it’s so important that we do this because not one of us has not been touched by cancer.

LEVEY: The volunteers donned matching blue polo shirts and grabbed red folders to leave at each congressional office they’d visit. They got a pep talk from Lisa Lacasse, the head of the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network.

LISA LACASSE: I know that you’re going to make such an impact today. Thank you all so much, and I’ll see you on the Hill.

(APPLAUSE)

LEVEY: Then it was on to the Metro for the ride up to the Capitol.

AUTOMATED VOICE: This is Capitol South. Doors opening on the left.

LEVEY: The army of volunteers hit 484 Senate and House offices, telling their stories and ticking through their priorities – funding for research, support for more cancer screening, federal aid for people to buy health insurance. The last was a tough sell in many Republican offices, but lawmakers from both parties have backed the other two. Mealing and the other New Yorkers were feeling good.

MEALING: It was amazing. Seven hundred of us going up to the Hill today – you could just feel the sense of everybody just stronger together.

LEVEY: When evening came, the volunteers met on the National Mall for a candlelight vigil. It was raining. Bagpipes were playing.

(SOUNDBITE OF BAGPIPES PLAYING)

LEVEY: Around a pond by the Lincoln Memorial, some 10,000 tea lights glimmered in little paper bags. Each luminary had a name on it, a person impacted by cancer. John Manna, another New Yorker, is a self-described Reagan Republican whose father died from lung cancer. He reflected on lessons this day could offer a divided nation.

JOHN MANNA: Talk to people. Get to know each other as people, and then you can understand somebody’s positions. And we have little disagreements but, you know, we don’t attack each other. We talk and discuss it.

LEVEY: Manna said he’d be back next year.

In Washington, D.C., I’m Noam Levey.

SIMON: And Noam is with our partner KFF Health News.

 

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