Legislators take state insurance while trimming Medicaid access - Insurance News | InsuranceNewsNet

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July 31, 2025 Newswires
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Legislators take state insurance while trimming Medicaid access

JAMIE LUCKE KENTUCKY LANTERNThe Central Kentucky News-Journal

Kentucky elects 138 people to serve in the state legislature and 98 of them get their health insurance through the state-sponsored plan for public employees.

State lawmakers also enroll 138 dependents in the state employees' health plan.

I bring this up not because I begrudge lawmakers and their families health insurance. Everyone should have health insurance. Not having health insurance is irresponsible if there's any way you can swing it.

I bring this up because Republican politicians have been talking a lot lately about who deserves and who does not deserve to be insured by Medicaid, the government program that Kentucky expanded 11 years ago to include low-income adults who often are described as the "working poor."

Medicaid also covers people who have disabilities, children, moms-to-be, new moms and seniors. One-third of Kentuckians get their medical care through Medicaid.

Republicans in D.C. and Frankfort have taken steps to winnow out those they consider undeserving. To partially pay for President Donald Trump's tax cuts and immigrant roundups, the number of Americans without health coverage is projected to increase by 17 million, according to the Congressional Budget Office. In addition to lowering Medicaid spending by $1 trillion over the next 10 years, the Big Beautiful Bill Act cuts subsidies to the Affordable Care Act insurance marketplace. Meanwhile, a tax credit that helps people afford health insurance is set to expire.

Republicans tell us their goal is to promote self-sufficiency and that their plans to boot the moochers, malingerers and sex-changers off the rolls will make Medicaid stronger.

But let's be real.

You can have a job — or a few jobs — and still not have health insurance or an offer of health insurance that you can afford.

A lot of Kentuckians who have jobs can afford health care only because of the Medicaid expansion.

Nationally only about half of small employers (those employing fewer than 50 people) sponsor a health insurance plan for their workers, and in Kentucky the share of small employers offering health insurance is lower than the national average.

Overall, about 1 in 4 workers are not eligible to enroll in employer-sponsored insurance. Even large employers are not required to offer health insurance to employees working fewer than 30 hours a week.

Which brings us back to the Kentucky legislature. It's a part-time job that's not meant to provide a primary livelihood. That 70% of lawmakers use this part-time job to insure themselves tells me that access to "quality private health insurance" is not plentiful.

I did not ask for any lawmakers' names when I filed my open records request with the Personnel Cabinet. I asked only for the number of lawmakers enrolled in the state health insurance plan.

Arithmetic tells us most of them are Republicans, since there are only 26 Democrats in the General Assembly.

Lawmakers and their families don't have to go through a full redetermination process or prove their "community engagement" every six months to keep their coverage — in contrast to the work requirements (really, paperwork requirements) that Republicans are imposing on working-age adults in Medicaid.

Monthly premiums for a single enrollee in the four plans for state employees range from $61 to $169.

Lawmakers over the years also have voted themselves nice pensions, giving them a degree of economic security unknown to many of their constituents, who, even if they have 401K plans at work, are at the mercy of investment markets for security in their later years.

I don't begrudge lawmakers their health insurance or their pensions. Legislative pay is low.

Still, you have to shake your head when lawmakers who have feathered their own nests use their power to punish people who don't even have a nest to feather.

Instead of figuring out how to kick people off health care, our elected leaders could do us all a favor by figuring out how to make the system work better for everyone.

Jamie Lucke, editor of the Kentucky Lantern nonprofit news service, is a University of Kentucky graduate with more than 40 years of experience as a journalist. She can be reached at [email protected].

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