Trump, Medicaid and Big Beautiful Bill
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The shift reflects the striking new politics of Medicaid — and how dramatically the GOP’s coalition has changed under Trump. Now Democrats are hoping Medicaid could be the iss
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Action News 5 on MSN‘We must fight:’ NAACP voices opposition over proposed Medicaid and SNAP cuts, Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’Love, president of the Tennessee State Conference NAACP, urged residents to call their senators and tell them to vote against the budget cuts that are proposed within President Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill.
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AlterNet on MSNFact-checker blows a big hole in Trump administration claim about MedicaidOne out of every $5 or $6 in Medicaid [payments] is improper.” Russell Vought stated on June 1, 2025, in an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union.” Responding to charges that President Donald Trump’s tax and spending bill would cut Medicaid coverage for millions of Americans,
Kansas will lose more than $3 billion in Medicaid funding, and thousands of Kansans will lose access to health insurance under Trump's proposed bill, according to a new report.
There’s a lot of work for lawyers in the nation’s capital these days: Over 400 lawsuits have been filed against President Trump’s administration since the start of his second term.
President Donald Trump has proposed walking back a Medicaid payment policy enacted during his first term — a move that has been met with concern by hospitals that serve high volumes of Medicaid patients.
Shares of Universal Health Services and other large U.S. hospital chains fell sharply Monday. The moves appeared to be in response to a directive Friday by President Trump telling the government to scrutinize Medicaid payments more closely.
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GOBankingRates on MSNTrump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ Would Slash Medicaid & SNAP: 3 Moves Retirees Should Make NowTrump's bill includes changes to Medicaid and SNAP that could threaten seniors' access to these programs. Here's what they can do to prepare now.
In Wisconsin 63,000 could lose Medicaid coverage under a federal spending bill, but state lawmakers have yet to draft a response.
Sen. Ron Wyden is renewing his call for Dr. Mehmet Oz, the head of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, to visit eastern Oregon and fulfill a commitment Oz made as a nominee during his Senate confirmation hearing earlier this year.