The Missouri Republican said large cuts to Medicaid would harm many people who voted for President Donald Trump.
Contradictory comments made by Donald Trump on Wednesday had both his own staff and Republicans working overtime to get on the same page on where the party stands on Medicaid.According to a report from Politico's Ben Leonard,
President Donald Trump’s endorsement of the House budget resolution as his preferred path to pass an extension of his 2017 tax cuts, border security funding and other parts of his agenda would likely require deep cuts to Medicaid,
Chris Cuomo challenges claims made by Elon Musk and Donald Trump about widespread fraud in Social Security, pointing to actual data that contradicts what they’ve been saying. Cuomo also
President Donald Trump late Wednesday directed the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to disband a committee to identify and reduce systemic barriers that people of color, LGBTQ+ people and rural Americans encounter when trying to access government health care programs.
As GOP hardliners spent the weekend pushing party leaders to cut deeper into Medicaid in an effort to advance Donald Trump’s tax and border agenda, swing-district Republicans have been warning the president directly that it would cost him control of the House.
Medicaid is quickly emerging as a political lightning rod as House Republicans negotiate on a massive bill to advance President Donald Trump's agenda. Some Republican lawmakers are worried about the level of spending cuts being sought by fiscal hawks to offset the cost of Trump's policies,
President Donald Trump’s return to the White House sent a clear signal about Medicaid to Republicans across the country: Requiring enrollees to prove they are working, volunteering, or going to sch | The Georgia and Arkansas proposals,
You know how when big bad national things happen they always seem to hit Nevada harder than other states? Republicans cutting Medicaid would be like that. An analysis published Thursday by the KFF health research organization examines the impacts of one prominent proposal congressional Republicans are considering to help pay for massive corporate tax cuts demanded by Donald Trump: eliminating the federal funding match for Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act.
President Donald Trump’s return to the White House sent a clear signal about Medicaid to Republicans across the country: Requiring enrollees to prove they are working, volunteering, or going to