Antelope Valley Press

Medicaid expansion gaining under Trump

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump is still trying to overturn “Obamacare,” but his predecesso­r’s health care law keeps gaining ground in places where it was once unwelcome.

Missouri voters this week approved Medicaid expansion by a 53% to 47% margin, making the conservati­ve state the seventh to do so under Trump. The Republican president readily carried Missouri in 2016, but the Medicaid vote comes as more people have been losing workplace health insurance in a treacherou­s Coronaviru­s economy.

That leaves only a dozen states opposed to using the federal-state health program for low-income people as a vehicle for covering more adults, mainly people in jobs that don’t provide health care. Medicaid expansion is a central feature of former President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act, covering about 12 million people, while nearly 10 million others get subsidized private insurance.

If present trends continue, it’s only a matter of time until all states expand Medicaid, acknowledg­ed Brian Blase, a former health care adviser in the Trump White House, who remains opposed to the expansion.

“Medicaid expansion is terrible policy, but it is attractive to states because it’s almost all federal spending and the insurance companies and hospitals get lots of dollars when a state expands Medicaid,” he said.

The federal government pays 90% of the cost of covering people through the expansion, a much higher matching share than for low-income disabled and elderly people traditiona­lly covered by Medicaid. Blase argues that’s an incentive to waste federal dollars. Before the ACA most low-income adults couldn’t get Medicaid unless they were caring for children.

“There’s lots of political pressure to expand,” said Blase. “Eventually all states are going to expand unless the enhanced (federal) match rate changes.”

Voters in another conservati­ve state — Oklahoma — approved a Medicaid expansion earlier this year, although the margin was much closer than in Missouri. Of the seven states that have expanded Medicaid in the Trump years, six have done so by referendum, said Rachel Garfield, a senior policy expert with the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation.

“This is an indication that there is large popular support for providing health care coverage for low-income people, and it is quite possible that this support has increased given what’s going on with the pandemic,” Garfield said.

The six states where voters have approved Medicaid expansion in the Trump years are Idaho, Maine, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Utah. In Virginia, the legislatur­e passed a Medicaid expansion after Democrats made political gains.

“That has been an interestin­g feature of the Trump administra­tion, that momentum among the states to expand Medicaid has not slowed down,” said Jesse Cross-Call, a policy expert with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, which advocates for low-income people.

Trump is trying to persuade the Supreme Court to toss out “Obamacare,” but as long as it remains the law his administra­tion has to carry out expansions that states approve. Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden would ask Congress to provide coverage where states have refused.

In Missouri, support for Medicaid expansion in cities and suburbs overcame opposition in rural communitie­s.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this May 1 file photo, campaign workers David Woodruff (left) and Jason White (right deliver boxes of initiative petitions signatures to the Missouri secretary of state’s office in Jefferson City, Mo.
ASSOCIATED PRESS In this May 1 file photo, campaign workers David Woodruff (left) and Jason White (right deliver boxes of initiative petitions signatures to the Missouri secretary of state’s office in Jefferson City, Mo.

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