Born and raised in Glenside, Pennsylvania, to Bob and Mary Dean, Madeleine got her start in politics around the dinner table with her five older brothers and one older sister. She was graduated from Abington High School, and at age 18 won election to serve as a local committee-person.
Madeleine completed her undergraduate studies at La Salle University in Philadelphia, and earned her law degree at Delaware Law School of Widener University. She returned home, practicing law in a small Philadelphia firm and with the Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Association and eventually serving as executive director. Madeleine then opened a small, three-woman law practice in Glenside.
Rep. Dean supports universal, affordable high-quality healthcare.
Defending the Affordable Care Act and Expanding Care
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) and Medicaid expansion have meant health coverage for tens of millions of Americans — including more than a million Pennsylvanians.
Since her first day in Congress, Rep. Dean has fought to defend the ACA against a lawsuit and repeated attacks from the former administration — including voting to pass H.R. 987, the Strengthening Health Care and Lowering Prescription Drug Costs Act.
With the American Rescue Plan — Rep Dean helped improve the ACA by expanding Premium Subsidies. In Pennsylvania, this has resulted in an average net premium reduction of more than half — from $168/month to $85/month.
Rep. Dean will continue to fight to ensure we make the premium subsidies permanent — reducing the cost of healthcare for all Americans — while continuing her push to open accessible healthcare options for all.
The Opioid Crisis
Rep. Dean is working hard to address the opioid crisis and America’s broader drug overdose epidemic, which now claims 70,000 lives each year. This fight is also personal to her — her son, Harry, is in long-term recovery from substance use disorder. Rep. Dean knows the pain addiction can cause a family, but also the hope that accessible, affordable, and widespread treatment can give.
As a member of the Bipartisan Addiction and Mental Health Taskforce, and she speaks regularly about the importance of destigmatizing substance use disorder and increased funding for treatment and recovery services and has introduced a number of legislative initiatives, including:
Mental Health and Suicide
Rep. Dean is keenly focused on America’s suicide problem. In her first seven months in office, she partnered with Republican Rep. Guy Reschenthaler (PA-14) to pass the STOIC Act, which allocates funds for suicide prevention efforts in police departments across the country. The bill was signed into law on July 25, 2019.
Women’s Reproductive Health
Rep. Dean unequivocally supports women and their right to make intimate medical decisions in consultation with their doctors. Safe, accessible, and quality reproductive healthcare is a fundamental right for women, and as such she is a co-sponsor and voted to pass H.R. 3755 — the Women’s Health Protection Act of 2021 — which protects a woman’s ability to determine whether and when to bear a child – and defends the rights of healthcare providers to provide reproductive health services.