Trump, Medicaid and One Big Beautiful Bill
Digest more
Florida did not expand Medicaid as most states did, so the impact may be lesser than other places, but reductions loom.
The bill includes stronger restrictions on Medicaid, which provides health care coverage to over 70 million low-income and disabled Americans, including 1.72 million Coloradans.
President Donald Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill into law on July 4. The massive taxing and spending bill was approved by a vote of 218-214 in the House of Representatives and 51-50 in the
The Oakland Press on MSN13h
Concerns over Medicaid cuts draw crowd to Oakland County town hall meetingFour state legislators who represent parts of Oakland County hosted the meeting at the Troy Community Center on Monday, July 7. They and their audience expressed uncertainty and outrage about the bill, which passed the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate by narrow margins last week. Trump signed it on July 4.
Jamie Vigil fears the impact that Medicaid cuts in Trump's "big, beautiful bill' will have on her ability to obtain skin cancer treatment.
For Catholic Charities of New Hampshire and its six nursing homes, it’s impossible to overlook one provision of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that seems to have escaped the spotlight: the reduction of Medicaid’s retroactive pay window.
Planned Parenthood could be forced to close hundreds of its clinics if the Republicans’ reconciliation bill is signed into law
"The One Big Beautiful Bill Act that stops forced taxpayer funding of the abortion industry has been retained in the Senate bill," Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America’s President Marjorie Dannenfelser said in a press release. "Taxpayers should never be forced to funnel their hard-earned dollars to Big Abortion."