Claudette Newsome, 42, of Houston Texas, is one of millions of Americans who could lose their federal tax credit to help pay for marketplace health insurance if plaintiffs prevail in the upcoming U.S. Supreme Court case, King vs. Burwell. After watching her husband die of cancer with no health insurance, Newsome, a self-employed marketing consultant, said she'll join protesters in Washington, D.C. to urge the high court to retain the subsidies when oral arguments begin on March 4, 2015. Photo taken Feb. 26, 2015.
Claudette Newsome, 42, of Houston Texas, is one of millions of Americans who could lose their federal tax credit to help pay for marketplace health insurance if plaintiffs prevail in the upcoming U.S. Supreme Court case, King vs. Burwell. After watching her husband die of cancer with no health insurance, Newsome, a self-employed marketing consultant, said she'll join protesters in Washington, D.C. to urge the high court to retain the subsidies when oral arguments begin on March 4, 2015. Photo taken Feb. 26, 2015. McClatchy
Claudette Newsome, 42, of Houston Texas, is one of millions of Americans who could lose their federal tax credit to help pay for marketplace health insurance if plaintiffs prevail in the upcoming U.S. Supreme Court case, King vs. Burwell. After watching her husband die of cancer with no health insurance, Newsome, a self-employed marketing consultant, said she'll join protesters in Washington, D.C. to urge the high court to retain the subsidies when oral arguments begin on March 4, 2015. Photo taken Feb. 26, 2015. McClatchy