In February, Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder (R) endorsed expanding Medicaid coverage under the Affordable Care Act, which would bring health care coverage to about 470,000 low-income Michiganders who would otherwise go without. It was an easy call for Snyder to make, but persuading the Republican-led state legislature would take more effort.
In June, Medicaid expansion cleared the state House, but the bill appeared stuck in the state Senate. Last night, however, after some unexpected drama, the measure passed.
The fierce struggle among Republicans over whether to make Medicaid available to more low-income people played out in Michigan on Tuesday as the Republican governor, Rick Snyder, narrowly succeeded in swaying enough conservative senators in the State Legislature to accept the expansion, which was part of President Obama’s health care law.
Mr. Snyder’s preferred bill — one he had lobbied for intensely for months — initially fell short by one vote, but the governor salvaged a deal hours later. The vote in the Republican-controlled Senate was 20 to 18, with only 8 Republicans in favor. The Michigan House, which had earlier approved a similar measure, will need to vote on the Senate version before Mr. Snyder can sign the bill.
Snyder said after the vote that the Affordable Care Act may be “divisive,” but the governor asked the state to “step back and look to say this isn’t about the Affordable Care Act.”
No, of course not. It’s just about part of “Obamacare” that some Republicans can apparently tolerate.
The debate in Michigan quickly became a microcosm of the broader national fight — proponents of the policy noted Medicaid expansion would cover hundreds of thousands of uninsured people, boost the state economy, and even save Michigan money. Opponents said government is bad, and measures that save money might someday secretly cost more money. (I didn’t say it was an intelligent debate; I said it was a microcosm.)
The back and forth in Michigan continued for months, leading up to last night’s dramatic developments.
The state Senate debated for more than eight hours, and actually balked at the Medicaid proposal, at least at first. Dylan Scott had a good summary:









