Florida Gov. Rick Scott (R), who has made hating “Obamacare” his raison d’etre, really did not want to accept the Medicaid expansion policy in the Affordable Care Act. When the Supreme Court made the policy optional, Scott was among the first to announce that he would ignore the offer. When the Obama administration tried to work with him on the issue, the far-right governor got caught lying about Medicaid in order to prevent its expansion.
But in the end, the Florida Republican just couldn’t figure out a way to ignore the arithmetic.
A bitter critic of Obamacare, Florida Governor Rick Scott announced a surprising change of opinion on Wednesday, saying he would back an expansion of Medicaid in the state. The Tampa Bay Times called it an “amazing policy reversal.” Scott had derided the program as a “job killer” and said last summer that the state would opt out of the expansion, a key part of President Obama’s health-care reform. […]
“It is not a white flag of surrender to government-run health care,” Scott said. “While the federal government is committed to paying 100% of the cost of new people in Medicaid, I cannot, in good conscience, deny the uninsured access to care.”
Scott is now the seventh Republican governor to accept Medicaid expansion — as recently as a few months ago, there were zero — but his decision arguably has the biggest impact. Indeed, given Florida’s size and population, Scott has, with this one decision, cleared the way for bringing health care access to 1.3 million Americans, expanding the reach of Obamacare to new heights.
It’s a three-year commitment — Scott is apparently looking at this as a trial run, with strings attached — but it’s nevertheless a remarkable change in direction for the unpopular Republican, who’s spent the last few years bragging about his unyielding opposition to President Obama’s health care law and everything in it.
And whether Scott intended this or not, it also ups the ante for other states, most notably those with Republican governors.
To reiterate a point from earlier in the month, the way the Affordable Care Act is structured, Medicaid expansion is a great deal for states, and should be a no-brainer for governors who care about lowering health care costs, insuring low-income families, improving state finances, and helping state hospitals.









