About a month after his inauguration, Donald Trump spoke at CPAC and assured conservatives, “We will not answer to donors or lobbyists or special interests.”
With the benefit of hindsight, the president’s rhetoric sounds almost cruel. The New York Times reported the other day, for example, on the Trump administration targeting protections for nursing home residents at the request of the industry.
The Trump administration is scaling back the use of fines against nursing homes that harm residents or place them in grave risk of injury, part of a broader relaxation of regulations under the president.
The shift in the Medicare program’s penalty protocols was requested by the nursing home industry.
Of course it was. The Times‘ report noted since the start of Barack Obama’s second term, federal officials found that “nearly 6,500 nursing homes — four of every 10 — have been cited at least once for a serious violation.” Given numbers like those, one is tempted to assume existing safeguards need to be maintained.
But under Trump’s new guidelines, regulators will be discouraged from fining nursing homes for some infractions, “even when they have resulted in a resident’s death.”









