Medicaid, SALT and Senate Republicans
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The Senate Finance Committee is revising the proposed Medicaid cuts in the GOP’s “big beautiful bill” — a move sure to spur vehement opposition from hospitals.
Senate Republicans on Monday released legislation that would cut Medicaid far more aggressively than would the House-passed bill to deliver President Trump’s domestic agenda, while also salvaging or slowing the elimination of some clean-energy tax credits, setting up a fight over their party’s marquee policy package.
A new study examines the potentially fatal impacts of Medicaid cuts in the new Republican-backed spending bill.
18hon MSN
A new poll shows most U.S. adults don’t think the government is overspending on the programs Republicans in Congress have focused on cutting, like Medicaid and food stamps.
The proposal would salvage some clean-energy tax credits and phase out others more slowly, making up some of the cost by imposing deeper cuts to Medicaid than the House-passed bill would.
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Congressional Republicans are in lockstep on new Medicaid work requirements not only because they help generate savings for Donald Trump's spending package but also because some of them say there is a moral imperative behind the proposed rules.
Cruz Hernandez graduated from Bullard High School last week and, hours after obtaining his high school diploma, boarded a plane to Washington, D.C. with his mother and younger brother to advocate against Medicaid cuts.
One in four Arizonans gets health care through Medicaid, which is vulnerable to budget cuts. Here's what you need to know about Arizona enrollees.
Republican Sen. Josh Hawley has been clear about his red line as the Senate takes up the One Big Beautiful Bill Act: no Medicaid cuts. But what, exactly, would be a cut?