Senate Republicans propose deeper Medicaid cuts. Here's what that means.
Senate Republicans are preparing to slice deeper into Medicaid to finance President Donald Trump's agenda, proposing legislation that analysts say could deal a greater financial blow to hospitals and result in millions more uninsured Americans.
The measure reflects Republicans' willingness to cut the nation's safety-net health insurance program, despite qualms expressed by some moderates and populists within their ranks.
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Last month, House Republicans passed massive tax-and-spending legislation projected to result in 7.8 million fewer Medicaid enrollees. The Senate Finance Committee's revisions to the bill released Monday could prompt even steeper coverage losses, sharply reining in a Medicaid financing maneuver that hospital groups say would slash payments to their facilities.
'The Senate just made a bad bill worse,' Chip Kahn, CEO of the Federation of American Hospitals, said in a statement. 'Rural communities would take the hardest hit, with struggling hospitals compelled to face difficult decisions about what services to cut.'
Rural areas disproportionately rely on Medicaid, and their hospitals are often the first backstop for patients without health coverage. Hospital networks said they might reduce pediatric, maternity or behavioral health services; end telehealth programs; close rural facilities; or enact layoffs if the Medicaid cuts become law, in a recent member survey by the American Medical Group Association before the Senate bill was released.
These changes would partly be the result of caps on provider taxes, an unusual example of a tax many hospitals are happy to pay. States charge extra taxes to medical providers - mainly hospitals, nursing homes and facilities for people with intellectual disabilities - and in return give the providers higher Medicaid payments. That brings in more federal matching funds, which are pegged to state payments.
The taxes, which some conservatives have dubbed a form of 'money laundering,' emerged in recent weeks as a top sticking point among Senate Republicans.
The Senate legislation would throw a huge wet blanket over this practice. It says states must gradually reduce provider taxes on hospitals until they are no higher than 3.5 percent of a provider's net patient revenue. Right now, that threshold is roughly 6 percent - and the House bill caps it at that rate.
At the same time, the Senate bill breaks with the House plan by exempting from the cap the two other main providers subject to the tax: nursing homes and facilities for people with disabilities.
The proposed cap would affect 18 states, including New York, Virginia and Arizona. Six red states with high provider taxes would be exempt because they did not expand Medicaid to cover childless adults with low incomes: Texas, Kansas, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi and South Carolina. But three states with Republican senators - Missouri, Iowa and Indiana - would be affected.
The cost of this move to hospitals isn't immediately clear. But they stand to lose $321 billion over the next 10 years under the House version and would face another $63 billion in costs from serving a larger uninsured population, according to an analysis by the Urban Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Hospitals collected $262 billion from Medicaid in 2022.
Associations representing hospitals slammed the Senate legislation and called on senators to push back on the cuts.
Ellen Kugler, executive director of the Alliance of Safety-Net Hospitals, said the Senate bill would 'bottom out resources that safety-net hospitals need to keep the doors open to serve their communities.'
The Senate is aiming to pass its bill by July 4, a deadline set by Trump. It would then need to be reconciled with the House version and approved in both chambers before becoming law. But the path forward is far from clear, as Senate Republicans can lose only three GOP votes and still pass their bill.
Americans have mixed feelings about the budget bill, with a plurality of 42 percent opposing 'changing tax, spending and Medicaid policies,' according to a recent Washington Post-Ipsos poll. Nearly two-thirds said the projected Medicaid enrollment drop from the House bill is unacceptable.
It's not just the provider tax caps that have hospitals up in arms. The Senate bill also would pare back two other funding streams for hospitals caring for larger Medicaid populations and providing better-quality care.
Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Missouri) said Tuesday that he is concerned the Senate proposal would hurt poor Missourians and lead rural hospitals to close, and he said it needs a lot of work before he could vote for it.
'I don't think they understand politically who our voters are,' Hawley told reporters, referring to Senate Republicans backing the funding cuts. 'But also, setting aside the politics of it, it's just not the right thing to do to shut down a bunch of rural hospitals to pay for tax cuts.'
But other Republicans sounded open to the Medicaid cuts after a Tuesday lunch meeting with Mehmet Oz, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Oz told Republicans the Senate bill would merely slow Medicaid growth, not reverse it, said Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-West Virginia).
'I believe what Dr. Oz said,' Capito said when asked whether she will support the Senate legislation, adding that she needs to 'talk to my folks in West Virginia' before committing to vote for it.
Capito and West Virginia's other senator, Jim Justice, are among the Republicans who had expressed resistance to cutting Medicaid. West Virginia, which would have to scale back its tax on ambulance services under the Senate bill, has one of the highest share of residents on Medicaid and relies more heavily on federal dollars than most states.
Justice told reporters on Tuesday that the provider tax caps would 'hurt' but that 'it may very well be you've just got to hold your nose on part of it and get through it.'
After the lunch, Oz brushed off concerns about the bill's changes to provider taxes after meeting with senators, telling reporters that he does not believe they would hurt rural hospitals.
'The framework of addressing the legalized money laundering with state-directed payments and provider taxes must be in this bill, it should be in this bill, and I believe it will be in the bill,' Oz said.
Health care experts generally agree the funding maneuver isn't the ideal way to boost federal funding for hospitals and other Medicaid providers. Former CMS administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, who served during the Biden administration, said there's 'an argument' against the provider tax.
'If it were up to me, I would change the way states can raise their state share,' she said.
But there's little support in a Republican-controlled Congress for hiking Medicaid spending in lieu of provider taxes.
Other Senate changes to the Medicaid proposal would expand requirements for some beneficiaries to work, train for a job or volunteer to include parents of older teenagers.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-South Dakota) acknowledged some members of his caucus are seeking changes to the Senate measure.
'We continue to hear from our members specifically on components or pieces of the bill that they would like to see modified or changed or have concerns about, and we're working through that,' Thune told reporters.
- - -
Daniel Gilbert, Theodoric Meyer and Liz Goodwin contributed to this report.
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CBS News
32 minutes ago
- CBS News
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CBS News
35 minutes ago
- CBS News
Rev. Al Sharpton, filmmaker Spike Lee speak out on Juneteenth
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USA Today
36 minutes ago
- USA Today
Israel-Iran live updates: Trump to decide on US role in conflict within 2 weeks
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She did not provide specifics on what was in it. -Francesca Chambers President Trump joined an 11:30 am meeting with members of his national security team in the White House Situation Room. In the afternoon, he'll hold a private, swearing-in ceremony for his ambassador to Ireland, Edward Walsh, a businessman from New Jersey. Trump has no public events on his schedule – but he posted on Truth Social throughout the morning about various topics − including his extension of the deadline for a deal to save TikTok. He's given no public clue on which way he's leaning over a possible U.S. attack on Iran's nuclear program. June 19 is a federal holiday, but the White House is treating it like a regular work day, as Trump contemplates his options on Iran. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt will hold an on-camera briefing at 1pm. -Francesca Chambers The U.S. embassy in Jerusalem was working to evacuate Americans from Israel by commercial flights and on cruise ships after Israeli air and seaports were reopened. Foreigners are trying to flee both Israel and Iran in the face of a deepening crisis. Here's who's leaving: AUSTRALIA: The Australian government evacuated by land a small group of the 1,200 Australians on June 18, Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said. Around 1,500 Australians in Iran have registered for assistance. AUSTRIA: Forty-eight Austrians have left Israel or neighboring Jordan, the Foreign Ministry said. Around 100 Austrians have requested to leave Iran. Forty-four Austrian and EU citizens have been evacuated towards Turkey and Armenia, it added. CHINA: China has evacuated more than 1,600 citizens from Iran and hundreds more from Israel, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said June 19. Several thousand Chinese nationals are thought to reside in Iran, according to state media reports. CZECH REPUBLIC: A flight with 66 people evacuated from Israel had landed near Prague, Czech Defence Minister Jana Cernochova said. FRANCE: France will arrange a convoy by the end of the week from Iran to the Turkish or Armenian borders, French foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot said. French citizens in Israel can board buses starting the morning of June 20 from the Jordanian border. GERMANY: 345 German citizens have left the Middle-East region on charger flights, the foreign ministry said. INDIA: India said had launched "Operation Sindhu" to evacuate Indian nationals from Iran. 110 Indian students were earlier evacuated from northern Iran to Armenia. ITALY: Italy is organizing a charter flight from Egypt on June 22 to allow its citizens to leave Israel. Some 500 Italians are leaving Iran. JAPAN: Japan's government said it would send two Self-Defense Forces transport aircraft to Djibouti in preparation for the evacuation of Japanese nationals from Iran and Israel. -Reuters The president took aim at a report in the Wall Street Journal that he had green-lighted plans for U.S. forces to attack Iran's nuclear program. Citing three people familiar with the deliberations, the Journal reported on June 18 that Trump had approved a strike plan but had not issued an order to proceed with it, as he waited to see if Tehran would agree to give up its nuclear enrichment program. On June 19, Trump disparaged the report. "The Wall Street Journal has No Idea what my thoughts are concerning Iran!" he wrote in a single-line post on Truth Social. -Francesca Chambers Iran is maintaining crude oil supply by loading tankers one at a time on the Persian Gulf and moving its seabound floating oil storage much closer to China, two vessel tracking firms told Reuters, as the country seeks to keep a key source of revenue while under attack from Israel. The conflict between Iran and Israel poses a fresh hurdle for Iran, which uses a shadow fleet of tankers to conceal their origin and skirt U.S. sanctions reinstated in 2018 over its nuclear program. Crude exports from Iran, OPEC's third-largest producer, mainly head to China. Iran has loaded 2.2 million barrels per day of crude oil so far this week, marking a five-week high, analytics firm Kpler said. Energy infrastructure in both countries has been targeted in missile exchanges, including the Haifa oil refinery in Israel and Iran's South Pars gas field, though Iran's major crude exporting facility at Kharg island has so far been spared. Iran has moved part of its 40 million barrel floating storage fleet, which sits on 36 different vessels, much closer to China to minimize the impact of any disrupions on buyers, ship tracking firm Vortexa told Reuters. -Reuters Separatist and jihadist militants on the Pakistan-Iran border could take advantage of any collapse of authority in Iran, fears that Pakistan's army chief pressed in a meeting this week with the President Donald Trump. Anti-Iranian and anti-Pakistan outfits operate on both sides of the 560-mile long border. As Israel bombs Iran's nuclear program, its officials have repeatedly indicated that they are seeking to destabilize the Iranian government or see it toppled. As well as worrying about chaos spilling over from Iran, Pakistan is concerned about the precedent set by Israel of attacking the nuclear installations of another country. Nuclear-armed rivals Pakistan and India fought a four-day conflict in May. Following a June 18 lunch at the White House with Pakistan's army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, Trump said: 'They're not happy about anything,' referring to Pakistan's views on the Israel-Iran conflict. -Reuters Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said the military had been instructed to intensify strikes on strategic-related targets in Tehran to eliminate the threat to Israel and destabilise what he called the "Ayatollah regime." Who is Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader? As President Donald Trump and Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei trade threats, here's what to know about the Iranian official. He called Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei "the modern Hitler" and said "this man should not continue to exist." Netanyahu has said Israel's military attacks could result in the toppling of Iran's leaders, and Israel would do whatever is necessary to remove the "existential threat" posed by Tehran. But Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar said regime change was not an official goal, "for the time being." More: Who is Iran's Supreme Leader? Like Trump, he controls a real-estate empire "The matter of changing the regime or the fall of this regime is first and foremost a matter for the Iranian people," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told public broadcaster Kan late on June 19. "There is no substitute for this." President Trump has focused on ending Iran's nuclear program, but on June 17 he mused about the possiblity of killing Khamenei, calling him an "easy target." The Trump administration has at least 40,000 reasons to worry about the aftermath of a potential attack on Iran. Susan Page: The risks for Trump of 'regime change' in Iran: Just ask George W. Bush That's the rough number of U.S. troops stationed in the Middle East, in bases from Bahrain to Syria and points in between. Not to mention U.S. citizens who live and work in the region. They would be vulnerable to counterattacks that could involve Iranian ballistic missiles, drones or terrorism should the United States join Israel in its ongoing attack on Iran's nuclear facilities. Iran can strike 'all of them,' a U.S. Defense official said. -Tom Vanden Brook and Cybele Mayes-Osterman More: 40,000 reasons to worry: U.S. troops in Middle East could face Iran blowback Iran's foreign minister said that the Soroka hospital in Beersheba, Israel, was damaged in an attack on a nearby military command center, which Israel denied. "Earlier today, our powerful Armed Forces accurately eliminated an Israeli Military Command, Control & Intelligence HQ and another vital target," Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araqchi said on X. "The blast wave caused superficial damage to a small section" of the Soroka hospital. Araqchi pointed out Israel's repeated attacks on hospital facilities in Gaza. 'The claim of an attack on an intelligence base or the presence of military equipment under the hospital is another lie. We are not so despicable as to endanger civilians,' the IDF said in a Persian-language statement, the Times of Israel reported. 'Attacking hospitals is a crime. Fabricating a reason does not justify it.' No deaths were reported in the attack. Six people were seriously injured, emergency workers said. Like thousands of other Palestinians in Gaza, Hind Al-Nawajha takes a dangerous, miles-long journey every day to try to get some food for her family, hoping she makes it back alive. The mother-of-four had to duck down and hide behind a pile of rubble on the side of the road as gunshots echoed nearby. "You either come back carrying (food) for your children and they will be happy, or you come back in a shroud, or you go back upset (without food) and your children will cry," said Nawajha, 38, a resident of Beit Lahiya, in northern Gaza. "This is life, we are being slaughtered, we can't do it anymore." In the past two days, dozens of Palestinians have also been killed by Israeli fire as they tried to get food from aid trucks brought into the enclave by the United Nations and international relief agencies, Gaza medics said. More: Trump-backed Gaza aid sites temporarily close after dozens killed in shootings On June 19, medics said at least 40 people were killed by Israeli gunfire and military strikes, including 12 people who tried to approach a site operated by the U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation in the central Gaza Strip, the latest in near-daily reports of killings of people seeking food. There was no immediate comment from the Israeli army on the incident. In recent days, the Israeli military said its forces had opened fire and fired warning shots to disperse people who approached areas where troops were operating, posing a threat. It said it was reviewing reports of casualties among civilians. -Reuters The 'vast majority' of President Donald Trump's MAGA movement 'will get on board' with strikes on Iran, if he goes ahead with military action, his former chief White House strategist Steve Bannon says. Should he decide there's no diplomatic solution to be had, Trump will need to walk the American people and MAGA through his thinking, Bannon told reporters at a June 18 breakfast hosted by the Christian Science Monitor. But Trump is also likely to win ove most of his naysaying supporters. 'There will be some, but the vast majority of the MAGA movement will go, 'look, we trust your judgement, you've walked us through this, we don't like it, in fact maybe we hate it, but we'll get on board,'' Bannon said. -Francesca Chambers Contributing: Reuters