There’s no shortage of controversies surrounding the House Republicans’ far-right budget plan, but at the top of the list is what the party has in store for Medicaid. It’s easy to understand why: GOP officials seem to realize that it’s not a great look for Republicans to cut taxes for the wealthy while simultaneously taking health care benefits from low-income families.
Party leaders have gone out of their way to claim that the House GOP budget blueprint does not include Medicaid cuts. In fact, they said, it doesn’t even mention the health care program at all.
“It doesn’t even mention Medicaid in the bill,” House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters. “The word ‘Medicaid’ is not even in this bill,” House Majority Leader Steve Scalise added. “This bill doesn’t even mention the word ‘Medicaid’ a single time.”
It’s not nearly that simple. As The New York Times reported:
The budget resolution itself is silent on whether Congress cuts Medicaid, which provides health coverage to 72 million poor and disabled Americans. But it instructs the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has jurisdiction over the program, to cut spending by $880 billion over the next decade.
In other words, the House Republicans’ budget plan doesn’t literally cut Medicaid, it simply directs the House committee that oversees Medicaid to find deep cuts that can only be found in Medicaid.
Indeed, some GOP members have been willing to acknowledge publicly what is plainly true. Republican Rep. Russ Fulcher of Idaho, for example, who sits on the Energy and Commerce Committee, recently told The Hill, “There’s only one place you can go, and that’s Medicaid. That’s where the money is. There’s others, don’t get me wrong, but if you’re gonna get to $900 billion, something has to be reformed on the Medicaid front.”
I’m mindful of the larger partisan circumstances. Donald Trump, for example, vowed on Fox News last week that Medicaid would go untouched during his presidency. Around the same time, Republican Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri said, “I don’t like the idea of massive Medicaid cuts.”








