Trump’s return puts Medicaid on the chopping block
Under President
Donald Trump’s return to the
The proposals include rolling back the Affordable Care Act’s expansion of Medicaid, which over the last 11 years added about 20 million low-income adults to its rolls. Trump has said he wants to drastically cut government spending, which may be necessary for
Trump made little mention of Medicaid during the 2024 campaign. The first Trump administration approved work requirements in several states, though only
House Budget Committee Chair
“Without them, we will watch this country sadly enter into fiscal collapse,” he said. Rep.
“You need wholesale reform on the health care front, which can include undoing a lot of the damage being done by the ACA and Obamacare,” Roy said. “Frankly, we could end up providing better service if we do it the right way.”
Advocates for poor people fear
“Medicaid is an obvious target for huge cuts,” said
Medicaid, which turns 60 in July, is nearing the end of a disruptive period, after COVID pandemic-era coverage protections expired in 2023 and all enrollees had to prove they still qualified. More than 25 million people lost coverage over the 18 months after the “unwinding” began, though it has not notably increased the number of people without insurance, according to the latest census data.
The unwinding’s disrup- tions could pale in comparison to what happens in the next four years, said
But Salo said any efforts to shrink the program will face pushback.
“A lot of powerful entities - state governments, managed-care organizations, long-term care providers, and everyone under the sun who wants to do well by doing good - wants to see Medicaid work efficiently and be adequately funded,” he said. “And they will be highly motivated to push back on something they see as draconian cuts, because it could affect their business model.”
The
· Shifting to block grants. Switching to annual block grants could lower federal funding for states to operate the program while giving states more discretion over how to spend the money. Currently, the government matches a certain percentage of state spending each year with no cap. Republican presidents since
· Cutting ACA Medicaid funding.
The ACA provided financing to cover, through Medicaid, Americans with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, or
The federal government pays 90% of the cost for adults covered through the law’s Medicaid expansion, which 40 states and
“We should absolutely note that we are subsidizing the healthy, able-bodied Medicaid expansion population at a higher rate than we do the poorest and sickest among us, which was the original intent of the program,” Arrington said. “That’s not right.”
· Lowering federal matching funds.
Since Medicaid began, the federal match rate has been based on the relative wealth of a state’s population, with poorer states receiving a higher rate and no state receiving less than a 50% match. Ten states get the base rate - all but two are Democratic-run states, including
· Adding work requirements. During the first Trump term, federal courts ruled that Medicaid law doesn’t allow coverage to be conditioned on enrollees’ working or seeking jobs. But the
“If we can get strict work requirements on able-bodied adults, that can be a huge cost savings by itself,” Rep.
· Placing enrollment hurdles.
About 10 states offer some populations what’s called continuous eligibility, whereby people stay enrolled for years without having to renew their coverage. That policy’s been shown to prevent enrollees from falling out of the program for short periods because of hardships or paperwork problems, which can lead to surprise medical bills and debt. The Trump administration could seek to repeal waivers that allow states to grant multiyear continuous eligibility, which would require people in those states to reapply for coverage annually.
If the GOP’s plans to shrink Medicaid are realized,
Conservatives have cited CMS reports saying states improperly pay Medicaid providers billions of dollars a year, though the federal government notes that is mostly due to lack of documentation.
He said the
“We need to rebalance the program that most people think is underperforming,” he said. Most Americans, including large majorities of both
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