Trump’s budget means deep cuts for health care safety net
While not addressing
Both safety net programs are federal-state collaborations, and such cuts would leave states with hard choices: spend more of their own money; restrict enrollment; cut benefits, or reduce payments to hospitals and doctors.
"If states get fewer dollars from the federal government, there are only so many options, because states have to balance the budget every year," said
Trump's budget was silent on bargaining with the pharmaceutical industry to reduce the cost of prescription drugs, a topic the president has often touched on. But the budget repeated Trump's previous proposals for double-digit percentage cuts to the
The trillion-dollar-plus
As a candidate and as president Trump has frequently talked about making health care more affordable for regular folks, including by lowering premiums and deductibles. He promised not to cut
"I think it will be challenging for states to try to figure out what to do," said
Coverage for children previously had not figured as a major issue for the administration, which separately is calling for paid parental leave. The CHIP health program covers about 7 million children, and traditionally enjoyed bipartisan support. While Trump's budget would extend CHIP for another two years, it would also cut
"It's a big impact," said Riley. States would receive significantly lower overall payments from the federal government, and
More than half the states now cover children above the administration's proposed cutoff, Riley said. Administration officials say that the limitation proposed in the budget would focus taxpayer money on families who need it the most.
Trump's budget would squeeze additional savings beyond that, but congressional aides say how much is not exactly clear. White House Budget Director
"The Trump budget assumes hundreds of billions more in
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