Last year, with the Trump administration’s blessing, Arkansas became the first state to impose work requirements on Medicaid beneficiaries. The result was a predictable disaster.
Republican officials in the state created a hard-to-navigate system for beneficiaries, with onerous reporting requirements, which in some cases actually led people to lose the jobs they already had.
When more than 18,000 low-income Arkansans were dropped from Medicaid, the Trump administration’s original position was that these people simply “decided that they didn’t want” health care coverage anymore. More recently, HHS Secretary Alex Azar made the case that they lost coverage because they received great jobs in Donald Trump’s “booming economy” and no longer needed Medicaid.
It wasn’t long before the data suggested Azar was very wrong.
Despite — or perhaps because of? — the developments in Arkansas, Republican policymakers in more than a dozen states decided they wanted to impose similar restrictions on Medicaid beneficiaries. In all, eight states have followed in Arkansas’ footsteps, each with the Trump administration’s encouragement.
Those efforts, however, will now have to wait. The Trump-backed policy isn’t just a bad idea; it appears to be at odds with the law, too.









