There’s no shortage of controversial elements of the Republican Party’s far-right megabill — the inaptly named “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” — but the proposed Medicaid cuts aren’t just dangerous for low-income families. They’re also proving to be the most politically dangerous for GOP officials and candidates.
Party strategists have advised Republicans on how best to talk about the legislation, but I have a hunch the party’s consultants and spin doctors didn’t recommend the phrasing that Sen. Joni Ernst used during a town hall meeting with her Iowa constituents on Friday morning. The New York Times reported:
Senator Joni Ernst, Republican of Iowa, had a gloomy message for constituents at a town hall in Butler County, Iowa, on Friday morning: ‘We all are going to die.’ Ms. Ernst was fielding questions about cuts to Medicaid that were included in the domestic policy bill working its way through Congress, when someone in the audience yelled out that the effect would be that ‘people are going to die.’ ‘Well, we all are going to die,’ Ms. Ernst responded, drawing jeers from the crowd.
And while it’s certainly true that everyone’s life will, eventually, come to an end, policymakers tend not to comment on that fact when talking to the public about the effects of their health care proposals.
"Well, we all are going to die"#IASen Joni Ernst shocks her own constituents, dismissing concerns that supporting deep cuts to Medicaid and other services will cause people to die if they can't get the care they need.
— American Bridge 21st Century (@ab21.bsky.social) 2025-05-30T13:53:13.759Z
Indeed, it didn’t take long for Democratic opponents of the Republican bill to seize on Ernst’s comments. “I thought my job as Senator was to try to keep my constituents alive,” Democratic Sen. Tina Smith of Minnesota said via Bluesky. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee similarly called Ernst’s morbid remark “stunningly callous.”
As is always the case, context is everything, and some of the clips that have circulated online were a little too brief. (C-SPAN posted a video of the entire hourlong event.)
Told that people would die as a result of her party’s health care cuts, the Iowa Republican really did say, “Well, we all are going to die.” Ernst went on to tell the audience, however, “What you don’t want to do is listen to me when I say that we are going to focus on those that are most vulnerable. Those that meet the eligibility requirements for Medicaid, we will protect. We will protect them.”








