
More than 20 states sue federal government over new health insurance rule
On its website, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) says the rule 'finalizes additional safeguards to protect consumers from improper enrolments and changes to their healthcare coverage, as well as establishes standards to ensure the integrity of the ACA Exchanges.''As New Jersey and other states prepare for the 2026 open enrollment period, the Trump administration is seeking to cause confusion and chaos in the healthcare marketplace, increase costs for our state, and create barriers to enrollment,' New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin said in a statement.After the lawsuit was filed, a representative for the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said in a statement that the rule strengthens oversight, ensures subsidies go to people who are truly eligible, and will lower individual health insurance premiums. The rule, finalized by CMS in June, includes provisions meant to limit improper enrollments and the improper flow of federal funds.The lawsuit challenges parts of the rule that shorten enrollment periods and impose a monthly $5 fee on some marketplace shoppers. It also targets a provision barring transgender healthcare from the list of essential health benefits subject to mandatory coverage under the ACA.The states argue that the rule imposes burdensome and expensive paperwork requirements and will force consumers to spend millions to prove eligibility for coverage and subsidies.- Ends(Inputs from Agencies)Must Watch
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Zelenskyy, Trump hold call after Witkoff-Putin talks; ceasefire hopes rise amid sanctions deadline
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