Medicaid, ICE and Trump
Digest more
Trump, protests and John Lewis
Digest more
Political battle erupts over Medicaid work requirements as Republicans frame them as preserving the safety net while Democrats argue they harm vulnerable populations.
New Hampshire, expects 46,000 New Hampshire residents will lose healthcare from Medicaid cuts in "Big Beautiful Bill."
President Donald Trump 's disapproval rating has hit a record high for his second term, according to a new poll. The latest Atlas Intel survey, conducted between July 13 and 18 among 1,935 respondents, put Trump's disapproval rating at 55 percent, up from 54 percent last month.
Rather than push people off Medicaid, President Donald Trump’s so-called “big, beautiful bill“ — now law — will “move more people into the workforce,” argued Mehmet Oz, administrator for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
States, already facing cuts to services by Trump administration, now trying to figure out how to fit Medicaid and SNAP cuts into their budgets.
Nearly three million Americans are either enrolled in Medicaid in multiple states or are simultaneously enrolled in both Medicaid and a subsidized Obamacare exchange insurance plan, according to a new analysis from the Health and Human Services Department.
A provision in the GOP’s sweeping new law is already changing how Americans stay covered under Medicaid and CHIP, and experts warn it could strip health coverage from millions.
Attorneys for Planned Parenthood argue that cutting Medicaid payments to their abortion providers will harm vulnerable populations with limited health care options