As recently as July, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) was not at all fond of the Medicaid expansion policy in the Affordable Care Act. In a speech at a D.C. think tank, he called the Obama administration’s policy “extortion.”
That was last year. This year, the governor has found more to like about the policy.
Gov. Chris Christie will expand the state’s Medicaid program to cover 300,000 uninsured New Jersey residents, The Star-Ledger learned today. […]
As for his decision to expand Medicaid, the Republican governor, a critic of President Obama’s Affordable Care Act, could reap up to $300 million by expanding the state program in the coming budget year.
For weeks, a coalition of labor, religious, family and consumer groups waged an aggressive letter-writing and media campaign encouraging Christie to expand the Medicaid program. Doing so, they argued, would allow 300,000 uninsured and childless people to apply for Medicaid.
Christie is now the eighth Republican governor to accept Medicaid expansion — as recently as early December, there were zero — and as Sarah Kliff noted, “Taken together, these eight states will extend Obamacare’s coverage expansion to 3.2 million Americans.”









