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Older voters have long said that access to affordable health care is one of their top priorities. Then came the greatest health crisis in generations. But the coronavirus pandemic is a
complex issue. As of early July, COVID-19 had stricken more than 2.9 million people in the U.S. and cost nearly 130,000 American lives. And no one expects it to be contained before Election
Day. At the same time, the pandemic has sidelined tens of millions of workers and threatened the future of countless businesses. Then, in late May, came a third national crisis, when
hundreds of thousands of Americans of all ages took to the streets after the death of George Floyd, an African American whom, a video showed, a Minneapolis police officer pinned down by
keeping his knee on Floyd's neck for more than eight minutes. So, will it still be health care that drives voters in their election decisions this November? Will the cries for criminal
justice reform keep up until the election? Will that iconic phrase from campaigns past — “It's the economy, stupid” — resonate again? Or, as older voters go to the polls in what's
expected to be record numbers, will they focus less on individual issues and more broadly on leadership and vision? Interviews with a cross section of older voters, plus fresh polling data,
suggest the answer is all of the above: Voters are evaluating candidates through a different lens than they might have absent the pandemic or racial-justice protests. A CALL FOR UNITY
"Let's face it, the landscape has changed permanently,” says Francis Hessing, a retired airline corporate trainer who lives in Anchorage, Alaska. A Democrat, Hessing, 58, says for
him the issue in this campaign is honesty. “Now with the pandemic, it's even more about honesty going forward,” he says. "To me, we have three national emergencies now,” says Chris
Bowers, 56, a Dallas lawyer and self-described lifelong Republican. “The first one is coronavirus. The second one is our country's economy. And then the third is the riots and the
responses.” Bowers is looking for elected officials “all the way from the local level to our president to unite our country” and wants candidates who “express clearly that everybody in
America should be treated equally, fairly and with justice. That message is not being clearly articulated now." Terry Madonna, director of the Franklin & Marshall College Poll in
Pennsylvania, predicts that the election “is, number one, going to be dominated by how President Trump handled the coronavirus; number two, the status of the economy; and number three, the
debate over police reform.” Still, Madonna says, health care is likely to remain a top-tier issue, particularly for senior voters. For Darlene Walker, 65, a legal administrative assistant in
Chicago, health care was always a predominant issue. The pandemic, she says, “makes me even more interested in the belief that health care should be decoupled from employment and should be
universal."