About two months ago, Nevada’s Republican governor, Brian Sandoval, did something no other Republican governor in the country had done: he endorsed President Obama’s Medicaid expansion plan. While clearly the right move on policy grounds, Sandoval’s decision was a political surprise — conservative groups have made it abundantly clear to GOP governors that activists on the right consider this policy an outrageous betrayal of conservative principles that would not be tolerated.
It took a month for Sandoval to get some company, but New Mexico’s Republican governor, Susana Martinez, ended up endorsing Medicaid expansion, too. A few days later, so did North Dakota Gov. Jack Dalrymple (R). Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer (R) grudgingly reached the same conclusion, as did Ohio Gov. John Kasich (R).
This week, Michigan’s Rick Snyder became the sixth Republican in the club.
A day before he delivers his budget message to the state Legislature, Gov. Rick Snyder gave his unconditional support for an expansion of Medicaid to include about 450,000 more uninsured, low-income Michiganders into the program.
“We’re all here to support expanding Medicaid,” Snyder said at a news conference called by a coalition of groups that support the expansion. “This is very exciting today. We’re moving forward with care for people who need it.”
The expansion will allow roughly 470,000 more uninsured low-income Michiganders to be covered by Medicaid.
This probably isn’t a coincidence. Once some Republican governors took the plunge, it apparently led some of their GOP counterparts in other states to notice the water was fine. And just like that, a policy that Republican chief executives were supposed to avoid like the plague — a policy that implements the dreaded “Obamacare” — is no longer GOP anathema.
“The logjam has broken,” Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA, said. Bill Pierce, a former Health and Human Services official under George W. Bush, added, “It’s a tipping point. You’ve now got a real conservative state, a battleground state and a blue state all signed up. If you’re a Republican governor thinking about this, you fit into one of those categories.”
However, for those who want to see more American be able to afford basic medical care, the news is not all good.
As Joan McCarter explained this week, Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett (R), for reasons that defy comprehension, rejected Medicaid expansion in his state.
The Medicaid expansion would have provided coverage to 542,000 additional people in the state over the next decade, according to analysis from the Kaiser Family Foundation. That would have cost the state $2.8 billion over a decade, with the federal government kicking in $37.8 billion to the state. More than 1.3 million Pennsylvanians are uninsured, nearly 13 percent of the state’s non-elderly population.









