logo
GOP Lawmaker Tells Trump He May Vote Against Budget Bill Over Medicaid Cuts

GOP Lawmaker Tells Trump He May Vote Against Budget Bill Over Medicaid Cuts

Yahoo25-02-2025
Democrat-turned-Republican Rep. Jeff Van Drew gestures toward President Donald Trump during a campaign rally in New Jersey in 2020. Credit - Saul Loeb—AFP/Getty Images
Around a dozen House Republicans are uneasy about the prospect of voting for their party's budget proposal over potential cuts to Medicaid, according to several people familiar with the conversations. And with only a narrow majority in the House, GOP leaders are now navigating an increasingly volatile path, where the fate of the budget, and the possibility of a government shutdown, hinges on resolving these internal divisions.
Rep. Jeff Van Drew, a former Democrat from New Jersey turned Trump-supporting Republican, tells TIME that he's prepared to vote against the sweeping budget plan on Tuesday, claiming its proposed $880 billion in cuts to Medicaid are too extreme—even if it helps pay for tax cuts and new national security spending.
'Working class people receive Medicaid as they are working,' Van Drew says of the government health insurance program that serves over 72 million Americans. 'This is not just lazy people who are sitting around not doing their job.'
Van Drew says he called President Donald Trump on Monday evening to express his opposition to the budget resolution: 'I told him I very well may not vote for this, and I'm certainly waiting until the last minute to see if some changes can be made, because I'm very unhappy.' During that call, Van Drew says Trump did not ask him to change his mind and vote for the House GOP's budget resolution or push back on his concerns about potential Medicaid cuts. 'He listened and he understood my concerns,' Van Drew says. 'I believe it's bad for him because he made a commitment,' referring to Trump's repeated pledges during his campaign and his presidency to protect Medicaid, a promise that many Republicans feel he is now at risk of breaking.
Trump has long positioned himself as a defender of entitlement programs, including Medicaid, which provides health care to low-income Americans. Throughout his political career, he has consistently vowed not to make cuts to Medicaid, even as his administration has pursued broader budget reductions. 'We're going to love and cherish Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid,' Trump told reporters on Jan. 31. Yet, only days later, he endorsed the GOP-led House budget proposal, which includes significant cuts to Medicaid.
The apparent contradiction has left members like Van Drew caught between their loyalty to Trump and the political realities of representing districts where Medicaid is deeply important. In recent days, protestors have lined up outside Van Drew's South Jersey district office. The uncertainty surrounding Trump's stance on Medicaid cuts has created further rifts within the GOP, as some lawmakers fear alienating the very constituents that helped Trump win crucial swing states.
'I don't want to see him go through this,' Van Drew says.
House Speaker Mike Johnson plans to hold a vote Tuesday on the measure, which calls for $2 trillion in cuts over a decade. But it's uncertain to pass given the fierce opposition from lawmakers representing districts with high Medicaid enrollment, many of whom are facing pressure from constituents who depend on the program for vital health care services. At recent town halls across the country, constituents have voiced their discontent over spending freezes and federal worker firings spearheaded by Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency. Some fear that voting in favor of these cuts could cost Republicans re-election support in 2026 by alienating their voters—many of whom voted for Trump and have benefited from Medicaid.
The ideological divide within the GOP runs deep. On one side, budget hawks argue that Medicaid is an 'open checkbook' contributing to the nation's $34 trillion debt, and they view this moment as a crucial opportunity to curb the nation's ballooning deficit. The proposed solution includes capping Medicaid spending, imposing work requirements, and targeting fraud—all of which would save an estimated $880 billion over the next decade, House Republicans estimate. Critics say that if the Medicaid cuts are approved by the House and Senate, millions of Americans will lose coverage, including children, new moms, seniors, veterans, and people with disabilities. Medicaid pays for 6 out of 10 of residents in nursing homes, with 5.6 million Americans counting on Medicaid for their long-term care bills.
Rep. Nick Begich, a Republican who represents Alaska's only congressional district, where a third of residents are enrolled in Medicaid, tells TIME that he wants 'to make sure that our nation's most vulnerable populations continue to be supported by programs like Medicaid.' While he didn't share how he would vote, he said he plans to 'ensure that Medicaid is preserved.'
Rep. Tony Gonzales, a Texas Republican who also has a large constituency enrolled in the program, co-authored a letter with seven other House Republicans representing large Hispanic populations urging Speaker Johnson to rethink the GOP's potential cuts on Medicaid. Gonzales met with Speaker Johnson on Monday and told TIME afterwards that he plans to continue their dialogue. 'We will cut waste and fraud while investing in our national security without pulling the rug out from under millions of Americans,' he says.
But the uncertainty leaves Speaker Johnson and his leadership team in a tight spot. With the House's razor-thin 218-215 majority, the GOP can afford only a handful of defections—making it increasingly unlikely that the party will be able to unite behind a budget that includes Medicaid cuts.
'I think we look good,' Johnson told reporters as he was leaving the Capitol Monday night. 'I mean we're having very productive conversations. As you all know, this is all part of the process and I think we're on track.'
Still, the internal strife could have dire consequences: without a budget, the government faces the very real possibility of a shutdown in mid-March.
From a political standpoint, that may present a prime opportunity for Democrats to sharpen their messaging heading into the midterms. Democrats plan to seize on any potential disarray to rally opposition to the Medicaid cuts, according to a source familiar with Democratic leadership's thinking, and could push hard to mobilize voters in Medicaid-heavy districts. Protect Our Care, a Democratic health care advocacy group formed to defend the Affordable Care Act during that last Republican trifecta in 2017, already launched a $10 million campaign titled 'Hands Off Medicaid' and is running ads on Fox News urging constituents to call their representatives.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries told reporters Monday that if Republicans vote for the budget, 'they're going to be held accountable for raising expectations that they were going to solve the affordability crisis in America and doing the exact opposite.'
Sen. John Fetterman, a Democrat from Pennsylvania, tells TIME that cuts to Medicaid are 'unacceptable' and that if Republicans 'want to further damage their brand … that's their prerogative.'
For House Republicans, the stakes are high. They must navigate the competing pressures from their own party's hard-line budget conservatives, the promises they and Trump made to constituents, and the threat of a government shutdown that could play into the Democrats' hands.
'It's not like I'm being soft or don't think we need to change a whole lot of stuff,' Van Drew says. 'I'm one of these people that was caught in the middle that wants to do the right thing by real people.'
'There's being conservative, and there's being extreme,' he adds. 'Those are two different things.'
Write to Nik Popli at nik.popli@time.com.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nvidia claps back against Chinese accusations its H20 chips pose a security risk
Nvidia claps back against Chinese accusations its H20 chips pose a security risk

CNBC

timea few seconds ago

  • CNBC

Nvidia claps back against Chinese accusations its H20 chips pose a security risk

Chip giant Nvidia pushed back Sunday in response to allegations from Chinese state media that its H20 artificial intelligence chips are a national security risk for China. Earlier in the day, Reuters reported Yuyuan Tantian, an account affiliated with Chinese state broadcaster CCTV, said in an article published on WeChat that the Nvidia H20 chips are not technologically advanced or environmentally friendly. "When a type of chip is neither environmentally friendly, nor advanced, nor safe, as consumers, we certainly have the option not to buy it," the Yuyuan Tantian article reportedly said, adding that the article said chips could achieve functions including "remote shutdown" through a hardware "backdoor." In response, a Nvidia spokesperson told CNBC that "cybersecurity is critically important to us. NVIDIA does not have 'backdoors' in our chips that would give anyone a remote way to access or control them." Nvidia on Tuesday similarly rejected Chinese accusations that its AI chips include a hardware function that could remotely deactivate the chips, also known as a "kill switch." Tensions between the U.S. and China on semiconductor export controls have escalated in recent weeks, even after Nvidia resumed sales of its H20 chip to China. Chinese state media has framed the H20 chip as inferior and dangerous compared to Nvidia's other chips, while the company has defended its chips. The company's resumption of its H20 shipments reversed a previous ban on H20 sales that was placed in April by the Trump administration. Nvidia's H20 chips — a less-advanced semiconductor compared to its flagship H100 and B100 chips, for example — were developed by Nvidia for the Chinese market after initial export restrictions on advanced AI chips in late 2023. U.S. export controls on some Nvidia chips are rooted in national security concerns that Beijing could use the more advanced chips to gain an advantage broadly in AI, as well as in its military applications. Chinese officials, meanwhile, are pushing for the U.S. to ease export controls on high-bandwidth memory chips as part of a trade deal before a possible summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, the Financial Times reported on Sunday, citing people familiar with the matter. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has supported Trump's policies while also lobbying for export licenses for the H20 AI chip. Huang has said he wants Nvidia to ship more advanced chips to China, underscoring his outspoken stance that Nvidia's chips becoming the global standard for AI computing is ultimately better for the U.S. to retain market dominance and influence over global AI development. China is among Nvidia's largest markets. Nvidia took a $4.5 billion writedown on its unsold H20 inventory in May and has warned that its topline guidance for the July quarter would have been higher by $8 billion without the chip export restrictions. Nvidia shares were up 1% to close at $182.70 on Friday and are up 36% this year.

Presentation Uncovers Why Millions Could Be Headed West Again—Just Like 150 Years Ago
Presentation Uncovers Why Millions Could Be Headed West Again—Just Like 150 Years Ago

Business Upturn

time20 minutes ago

  • Business Upturn

Presentation Uncovers Why Millions Could Be Headed West Again—Just Like 150 Years Ago

Washington, D.C., Aug. 10, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A presentation from former CIA advisor Jim Rickards unveils an unexpected trend emerging across the U.S.— a coming wave of domestic migration not driven by housing markets or politics, but by resources, geography, and history. 'We've seen this before. Entire cities formed overnight when people went looking for opportunity beneath their feet.' The American Migration Story Is About to Repeat Itself From the California Gold Rush to the Texas oil boom, America has a long history of internal migration driven by the discovery of valuable resources. According to Rickards, the next wave is already forming—and this time, the migration may not be physical, but financial and digital . 'You don't have to uproot your family or endure months of labor. The modern rush is quieter—but just as real.' Why Forgotten Regions Are Becoming the New Frontier Rickards outlines how regions once dismissed as 'flyover country' are now being reexamined for their rich, untouched mineral reserves . He points to vast public lands in the Mountain West, the Southwest, and Alaska as potential epicenters for new development, infrastructure, and technological growth. 'About 90% of this land is concentrated out west… many of the deposits have never been touched.' Cities Don't Just Appear—They're Built on What's Below Throughout the briefing , Rickards draws a straight line between natural resources and the birth of America's most iconic cities. Denver, Birmingham, Houston, and San Francisco didn't just happen—they rose because of the minerals that lay beneath them. 'Houston was known as 'Mexican Texas' until the discovery of Spindletop. Then everything changed.' Could the Same Thing Happen Again? While the circumstances are different, Rickards says the pattern is clear: when the country needs to rebuild, it turns inward—and downward. And this time, instead of pickaxes and railroads, the boom could be powered by AI infrastructure, advanced manufacturing, and energy-hungry tech. 'These minerals are fueling everything—from chips to satellites to next-gen cities.' About Jim Rickards Jim Rickards is a former advisor to the CIA, the Pentagon, and the White House, with over five decades of experience in intelligence and economic strategy. He currently leads Strategic Intelligence , a monthly briefing series that helps Americans anticipate and prepare for major economic and societal shifts—before they hit the headlines. Disclaimer: The above press release comes to you under an arrangement with GlobeNewswire. Business Upturn takes no editorial responsibility for the same. Ahmedabad Plane Crash

Chinese state media says Nvidia H20 chips not safe for China
Chinese state media says Nvidia H20 chips not safe for China

New York Post

time29 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Chinese state media says Nvidia H20 chips not safe for China

Nvidia's H20 chips pose security concerns for China, a social media account affiliated with China's state media said on Sunday, after Beijing raised concerns over backdoor access in those chips. The H20 chips are also not technologically advanced or environmentally friendly, the account, Yuyuan Tantian, which is affiliated with state broadcaster CCTV, said in an article published on WeChat. 'When a type of chip is neither environmentally friendly, nor advanced, nor safe, as consumers, we certainly have the option not to buy it,' the article concluded. President Trump banned the sales of H20 chips to China in April. AP Advertisement Nvidia did not immediately respond to a request for comment. H20 artificial intelligence chips were developed by Nvidia for the Chinese market after the U.S. imposed export restrictions on advanced AI chips in late 2023. The administration of President Trump banned their sales in April amid escalating trade tensions with China, but reversed the ban in July. Advertisement China's cyberspace watchdog said on July 31 that it had summoned Nvidia to a meeting, asking the chipmaker to explain whether its H20 chips had any backdoor security risks — a hidden method of bypassing normal authentication or security controls. Nvidia later said its products had no 'backdoors' that would allow remote access or control. In its article, Yuyuan Tantian said Nvidia chips could achieve functions including 'remote shutdown' through a hardware 'backdoor.' Nvidia has denied its products had 'backdoors' that would allow remote access or control. AP Advertisement Yuyuan Tantian's comment followed criticism against Nvidia by People's Daily, another Chinese state media outlet. In a commentary earlier this month, People's Daily said Nvidia must produce 'convincing security proofs' to eliminate Chinese users' worries over security risks in its chips and regain market trust.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store