Donald Trump, MAGA and Epstein
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The White House just spent six months jamming a massive legislative package through Congress with almost no margin for error. Now comes the real challenge.
Political battle erupts over Medicaid work requirements as Republicans frame them as preserving the safety net while Democrats argue they harm vulnerable populations.
In the name of “protecting vulnerable Americans” the Trump Administration will rip away Medicaid coverage from babies and toddlers CMS announces Medicaid demos that 8 states are implementing to cover babies and young children continuously w/o gaps will no longer be allowed pic.twitter.com/aXF0mKXL9S
New Hampshire, expects 46,000 New Hampshire residents will lose healthcare from Medicaid cuts in "Big Beautiful Bill."
An estimated 1.3 million people in New York are at risk of losing their Medicaid coverage in the next decade due to Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill."
1don MSNOpinion
Rather than being transparent about sweeping changes they were proposing, lawmakers buried them in a massive legislative package that was rushed to a vote before anyone — including many of the senators and representatives voting on the bill — could fully grasp what was inside.
State Human Services Commissioner Sarah Adelman says there’s “no scenario” in which New Jersey can make up the difference. Many residents expect to lose coverage.
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.
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.