Health insurance for millions could vanish as states put Medicaid expansion on chopping block
Republican lawmakers in several states have Medicaid expansion in their crosshairs, energized by President
As the feds consider cuts to Medicaid, some states are already moving to end or shrink their expanded Medicaid programs.
Legislators in
Meanwhile, discussions have stalled in non-expansion states such as
Many conservatives argue that Medicaid expansion has created a heavy financial burden for states and that reliance on so much federal funding is risky. They argue that expansion shifts resources away from more vulnerable groups, such as children and the disabled, to low-income adults who could potentially get jobs.
In
But even some
"Quite honestly, I have received hundreds of emails from constituents that have said, 'please do not repeal.' I have received zero asking me to repeal, which I think is very telling," said
McCann said she's interested in reining in Medicaid costs, but skeptical about a full expansion repeal. More than 89,000 Idahoans could lose their coverage if the state repeals its expansion, according to the latest numbers from the
"For the rest, what's going to happen to them? They will utilize the emergency rooms again, and we'll be back to the same problems we had prior to the Medicaid expansion."
Before President
All but 10 states, most of them controlled by
But the Trump administration and a Republican-controlled
The swirl of uncertainty at the federal level is supercharging efforts by Republican state lawmakers who have long opposed the program, despite its popularity.
I have received hundreds of emails from constituents that have said, 'please do not repeal.' I have received zero asking me to repeal, which I think is very telling.
–
In a public address last month,
"If you want to receive free health care — paid for by your fellow taxpayer — able-bodied, working-age adults have to work, go to school, volunteer or be home to take care of their kids" she said.
Sanders argued coverage without such requirements discourages people from working and being self-sufficient.
But advocates and experts point to a wide body of research that links Medicaid expansion to lower uninsured rates, better health care outcomes and economic benefits for states, hospitals and other providers.
Without expansion, they say, many of the working poor who don't have employer-sponsored insurance exist in a coverage gap: They don't earn enough to afford private insurance, and yet they earn too much to qualify for traditional Medicaid. Expansion bridges that gap.
And, advocates argue, yanking health insurance from tens of thousands of people in a state would have far-reaching consequences for families, hospitals and state finances.
"It would be absolutely disastrous for everybody at all levels of the state," said
"We would go right back to people being unable to seek preventative care until it's too late, back to loss of life, loss of health and financial catastrophe."
A coordinated national effort
Many of the attempts to repeal Medicaid expansion in states such as
"It's important to understand this is part of a well-orchestrated and financed effort to undermine Medicaid generally, especially for adults," said Alker, who is also a research professor at Georgetown's
Conservative-backed think tanks, including the
In
Neither organization responded to interview requests.
In
'Repeal in sheep's clothing'
This month, Redman revived his Medicaid bill. It would repeal Medicaid expansion next year if the federal government does not maintain the 90% match and the state does not receive federal permission to enact work requirements and a host of other new restrictions, including a 50,000 cap on expansion enrollment — just over half of its current enrollment — and a three-year limit on receiving benefits.
"This safeguard approach will strengthen
Rubel, the Democratic leader, described Redman's bill as "Medicaid repeal in sheep's clothing."
"It's a type of trigger law with incredibly unlikely-to-be-met conditions," she said. "Basically, they're saying unless you can fly a unicorn to the moon and back, Medicaid expansion will be repealed."
Conservative lawmakers in
Medicaid is popular nationally, in expansion and non-expansion states. Three-fourths of Americans have a favorable view of Medicaid, according to a
Polling in
"Citizens should not have to work this hard to get something passed that they want and need so desperately, and then keep imploring legislators not to take it away again," said Rubel.
Trigger laws
If
That's because nine states have so-called trigger laws that would automatically end Medicaid expansion if federal funding is cut:
Alker is skeptical that
Regardless of possible cuts at the federal level, states including
States need federal approval to impose such additional conditions on Medicaid eligibility.
The first Trump administration approved work requirements in 13 states, but the courts later struck those down and the Biden administration rejected such requests. States, including
Redman told
"I actually spoke to several folks at the new federal administration, and they said they're looking for waivers that are unique and creative, that they want to grant," he said.
Meanwhile, Republican lawmakers in non-expansion states have in recent years warmed to the idea of expansion. It was arguably the biggest issue of last year's legislative session in solidly red
But in
"I think we are better off seeing what they are going to do," he told reporters.
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