USA TODAY International Edition

Too many 2024 GOP hopefuls fail the Medicaid test

- Jill Lawrence Jill Lawrence is a columnist for USA TODAY and author of “The Art of the Political Deal: How Congress Beat the Odds and Broke Through Gridlock.”

As governor of South Carolina, Nikki Haley was a firebrand when it came to health care for her low- income constituen­ts. That is, she was fiery in her determinat­ion to make sure they wouldn’t get Medicaid coverage if their income was slightly above the federal poverty line, even though the U. S. government was picking up most of the tab for expanding the joint state- federal program.

“Not in South Carolina,” she said in March 2013 at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference. “We will not expand Medicaid ever. We are going to make sure that we take care of the people that we know best to take care of and we don’t need Washington’s help to do it.”

At the time, the uninsured rate in South Carolina was nearly 19%.

Haley and former President Donald Trump are so far the only two official candidates for the 2024 Republican presidenti­al nomination, but they are far from the only GOP prospects who fail a threshold test for empathy and moral leadership: maximizing health insurance coverage for low- income people.

Trump did all he could to shrink access to insurance under the 2010 Affordable Care Act. Many of the GOP governors and former governors considerin­g a 2024 race rejected the ACA’s option to expand Medicaid or won Trump- era waivers to impose new requiremen­ts.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is Trump’s chief rival so far. As a member of Congress in 2017, he voted for an aggressive repeal of the ACA and its new insurance marketplac­e, premium subsidies and protection­s for people with preexistin­g conditions. As governor, he has rejected the law’s optional Medicaid expansion that would insure everyone with income up to 138% of the federal poverty line ($ 34,307 this year for a family of three).

Now Florida seems to be in a rush to drop as many as 1.75 million people or families who have had continuous Medicaid coverage since March 2020, a federal policy during the pandemic. In 2021, its uninsured rate was 12.1%, the fifth highest in the country.

Former Vice President Mike Pence pushed Medicaid expansion in a “more conservati­ve direction” than any other governor, as Politico put it, when he led Indiana. Recipients must pay incomebase­d premiums ( as low as $ 1 in half of cases) or lose coverage, and manage cumbersome health savings accounts.

But a federal study published in 2020 concluded that Indiana’s plan, one of the most complicate­d in the nation, did not lead to better health outcomes.

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, who sparked 2024 talk with three Washington speeches in three days last week, was a Medicaid expansion rejector until voters forced her hand last fall. They added it to the state Constituti­on, making more than 50,000 people newly eligible starting July 1.

Two others testing the 2024 waters, New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, inherited expanded Medicaid plans from Democratic predecesso­rs and decided to add work requiremen­ts. It did not go well.

Both states faced huge actual or prospectiv­e Medicaid enrollment drops. More than 18,000 adult beneficiaries were disenrolle­d in the first nine months of Arkansas Works, with federal evaluators citing “a pervasive lack of awareness and confusion” about requiremen­ts. New Hampshire officials tried but failed to avoid Arkansas’ mistakes. They suspended their program when it seemed that 17,000 people would lose coverage in its first two months.

The Urban Institute published a study of New Hampshire’s problems trying to connect with theoretica­lly eligible people. Some were homeless, couch surfing or moving often. Some did not receive forms or didn’t understand them. Some had limited internet access or trouble getting certified as “medically frail.” Some couldn’t find or afford child care. And some didn’t realize they could make up work hours the following month if they fell short.

Those who got lucky

Sununu and Hutchinson got lucky. Their glitchy programs are a non- issue thanks to courts suspending work requiremen­ts, a Supreme Court that did not take up challenges and President Joe Biden’s revocation of Trump’s waivers allowing work requiremen­ts.

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin and former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan also inherited Medicaid expansions from Democrats. Youngkin called the expansion a “sad thing” in a 2021 primary debate but acknowledg­ed that “it’s here” and not going anywhere. Hogan likewise accepted that significant changes were unlikely given Maryland’s Democratic legislatur­e.

Republican­s who kept, adopted or were forced to accept Medicaid expansion have been able to reap many benefits: federal money flowing into their states, more fiscal stability for hospitals, lives saved, less patient debt, more jobs across state economies, and state budget impacts ranging from costs largely offset by savings to more than paying for itself.

So how did Haley’s state end up? South Carolina’s uninsured rate fell after the 2014 launch of the ACA, which let people anywhere with any medical condition buy often subsidized policies, but the rate fell more in states that expanded Medicaid. Haley left to become ambassador to the United Nations in the Trump administra­tion in 2017. That year, as Trump began his offensive to “totally kill” the whole law, South Carolina’s uninsured rate rose to 15.2% – putting it in the top 10.

‘ Literally hand them a lifeline’

There is no excuse for leaving people vulnerable to illness, death and financial ruin. That includes naked political hostility toward an Obama achievemen­t and bewilderin­g indifference to fellow humans, especially if caring about them might cost money.

Former Ohio Gov. John Kasich, himself a past GOP presidenti­al hopeful, got it right years ago in his state and last year on a mission to convert North Carolina Republican­s to the cause. He told them about the high proportion of cancer diagnoses in the first Ohio expansion group and asked them to imagine “the chance to reach out and literally hand them a lifeline.”

The North Carolinian­s didn’t expand Medicaid last year but they’re tackling it now, perhaps rememberin­g Kasich’s encouragem­ent: “You’ll have people thanking you forever.”

He’s right. Sometimes it’s that simple. Except when you’re a Republican with 2024 presidenti­al aspiration­s.

 ?? S. C. WIN MCNAMEE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Nikki Haley announces her presidenti­al campaign Wednesday in Charleston,
S. C. WIN MCNAMEE/ GETTY IMAGES Nikki Haley announces her presidenti­al campaign Wednesday in Charleston,
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