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On July 4, Trump signed into law the major tax and spending bill that makes it harder for low-income workers to get Medicaid.
Reauthorizing the enhanced Affordable Care Act credits, created and then extended under the Biden administration, will be a difficult policy to attract GOP support.
The big tax-and-spending bill President Donald Trump signed into law on July 4, 2025, included US$170 billion to fund the detention and deportation of those living in the U.S. without authorization.
Health Affairs' Jeff Byers welcomes Katie Keith of Georgetown Law and Deputy Editor Chris Fleming to the pod to discuss Trump ...
Jeff Daniels recently appeared on MSNBC’s “The Best People” podcast, hosted by Nicolle Wallace, and expressed his wish for ...
South Dakota will withdraw its Medicaid expansion work requirements proposal now that President Donald Trump has signed ...
In the 1980s, when Ronald Reagan reduced the government’s role in health care, including cuts to Medicaid, Whatcom County ...
Local leaders warn of lost benefits, rising healthcare costs and deep service cuts as federal budget shifts burden to states.
The Alaska Department of Health said Monday that the state could lose up to $500 million in Medicaid spending. On Wednesday, ...
Proposed Medicaid changes could lead to 1,500 excess deaths and $135 billion in economic losses annually, impacting health care and rural communities.
Taxpayers have effectively been paying twice for the same people enrolled in government-driven health insurance. The Centers ...
Republicans defended the GOP megabill’s Medicaid changes as targeting a group of people they believe shouldn’t qualify: people who can work but instead choose to stay home and chill.