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From left, Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif., House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., and Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., listen as Democrats hold a hearing on Republican threats to Medicaid, at the Capitol, in Washington, March 6, 2025. (AP)
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A Republican House resolution directed a committee to propose ways to reduce the deficit by at least $880 billion over a decade.
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Lawmakers have taken Medicare off the table for cuts, which makes it impossible to reach $880 billion without cutting Medicaid.
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The House proposal needs the Senate’s buy-in.
The prospect of deep Medicaid cuts has become a flashpoint in Congress, with leaders of both parties accusing their counterparts of lying.
House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., said Feb. 27 that a Republican budget measure would "set in motion the largest cut to Medicaid in American history," and Republicans are hiding the consequences.
"The Republicans are lying to the American people about Medicaid," Jeffries said. "I can't say it any other way. Republicans are lying. Prove me wrong."
Republicans said Democrats were distorting the Republican budget. Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., said, "The word Medicaid is not even in this bill."
House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said on CNN that Republicans don’t want to cut Medicaid, "and the Democrats have been lying about it."
Republicans are looking for massive budget savings to meet their goal of fully extending President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts. This is a separate process from Congress’ need to pass a continuing resolution to keep the government running by March 14 or else face a federal government shutdown.
Here’s what we know so far about potential Medicaid cuts.
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Medicaid serves about one in five Americans. The health care program for low-income people is paid for by the federal government and partly by states. Louisiana, home to Johnson and Scalise, has one of the highest state proportions of Medicaid enrollees.
The House Republican budget plan adopted Feb. 25 opens the door to slashing Medicaid, even though it doesn’t name the program.
The plan directs the House Energy and Commerce Committee to find ways to cut the deficit by at least $880 billion over the next decade.
The committee has jurisdiction over Medicaid, Medicare and the Children's Health Insurance Program, in addition to much smaller programs. CHIP offers low-cost health coverage to children in families that earn too much money to qualify for Medicaid.
Republicans ruled out cuts to Medicare, the health insurance program for seniors that leaders cut at their political peril. Medicare is about 15% of the federal budget, and Medicaid is about 8.6%.
When Medicare is set aside, Medicaid accounts for 93% of the funding under the committee’s jurisdiction, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found in a March 5 analysis. That means it is impossible for the committee to find enough cuts that don’t affect Medicaid.
"It’s a fantasy to imply that federal Medicaid assistance won’t be cut very deeply," said Allison Orris, an expert on Medicaid policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning think tank.
After Medicaid, the next largest program under the committee’s jurisdiction is CHIP. Lawmakers don’t appear to be planning to wipe out CHIP, but even if they did, they would only be a "fraction of the way there," said Joan Alker, an expert on Medicaid and CHIP at Georgetown University.
If Medicare cuts are off the table, the only way to achieve $880 billion in savings is through big Medicaid cuts, said Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at KFF, a health policy organization.
Andy Schneider, a professor at Georgetown who served in the Obama administration as a senior adviser at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, said even if the committee eliminated all of those "other" programs entirely it could only achieve $381 billion in savings — about 43% of the target.
"In short, if they don't want to cut Medicaid (or CHIP), and they don't want to cut Medicare, the goal of cutting $880 billion is impossible," Schneider said.
The $880 billion cut is not a done deal. House Republicans were able to pass their budget package, but Senate Republicans are taking a different approach, without proposing such significant cuts.
Any finalized budget blueprint would need Senate Republicans’ buy-in. Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., is among Republicans who have spoken against potential cuts; he told HuffPost, "I would not do severe cuts to Medicaid."
The numbers are starting points that may lead to negotiation among at least Republicans, Joe Antos, a health care expert at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, said. "We are a long way from final legislation, so it’s not possible to predict how much any program will be cut," he said.
"If the bill also includes extending the (Trump 2017) tax cuts, we are probably months away from seeing real language," Antos said.
Once the House and Senate have reached an agreement on language and the resolution passes both chambers, the committees will work on detailed cuts. To enact such cuts, both chambers would need to approve a separate bill and receive Trump’s signature.
Republican leaders have deflected concerns about Medicaid cuts by talking about a different target: Medicaid fraud.
"I'm not going to touch Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid. Now, we're going to get fraud out of there," Trump told Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo on March 9, in keeping with his campaign rhetoric that he would protect those programs.
At the same time, Trump praised the House resolution that would make cuts highly likely: "The House Resolution implements my FULL America First Agenda, EVERYTHING, not just parts of it!"
Would eliminating fraud solve the Medicaid problem? No.
On CNN, Johnson said cutting fraud, waste and abuse would result in "part of the savings to accomplish this mission." He said the government loses $50 billion a year in Medicaid payments "just in fraud alone."
Johnson conflated "fraud" with "improper payments." The Government Accountability Office, the nonpartisan investigative arm that examines the use of public funds, found about $50 billion in improper payments in Medicaid and the same amount in Medicare in 2023.
Those improper payments were made in an incorrect amount (overpayment or underpayment), should not have been made at all, or had missing or insufficient documentation. But that doesn’t mean that there was $50 billion in Medicaid fraud, which would involve obtaining something through willful misrepresentation.
The system used to identify improper payments is not designed to measure fraud, so we don’t know what percentage of improper payments were losses due to fraud, said Schneider, the former Obama administration health adviser.
Plus, it’s a drop in the overall bucket of the potential $880 billion in cuts.
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Our Sources
Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Press release and press conference Medicaid and video clip, Feb. 27, 2025
House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, Press release about Medicaid, Feb. 25, 2025
President Donald Trump, Truth Social, Feb. 19, 2025
Factbase, Interview: Sean Hannity Interviews Donald Trump and Elon Musk on Fox News, Feb.18, 2025
Factbase, Remarks: Donald Trump Signs Executive Orders in the Oval Office, Jan. 31, 2025
Factbase, Interview: Maria Bartiromo Interviews Donald Trump on Fox News Sunday Morning Futures, March 9, 2025
Factbase, Speech: Donald Trump Holds a Political Rally in Wildwood, New Jersey, May 11, 2024
CNN, Transcript, Feb. 26, 2025
KFF Health News, GOP Takes Aim at Medicaid, Putting Enrollees and Providers at Risk, Feb. 21, 2025
KFF, 10 Things to Know About Medicaid, Feb. 18, 2025
Politico, Budget won't be changed to address Medicaid concerns, Johnson says, Feb. 24, 2025
NBC News, Who does Medicaid cover? How Congress' proposed budget cuts could be felt, March 2, 2025
NBC News, House narrowly adopts budget plan to advance Trump's agenda in a win for Speaker Johnson, Feb. 25, 2025
Congress.gov, H. Con. Res. 14 Concurrent Resolution, accessed Feb. 25, 2025
Clerk for the United States House of Representatives, Roll Call 50 | Bill Number: H. Con. Res. 14, Feb. 25, 2025
KFF Health News’ ‘What the Health?’ House GOP Plan Targets Medicaid, Feb. 27, 2025
FactCheck.org, The War of Words Over Medicaid Cuts, March 3, 2025
Huffpost, GOP Sen. Josh Hawley Warns Against 'Massive' Medicaid Cuts: 'I Don't Like The Idea,' Feb. 19, 2025
The Washington Post, Some Republicans fear Medicaid cuts could cost them their jobs, Feb. 27, 2025
Forbes, BREAKING NEWS: Josh Hawley Says He's Concerned About Cuts To Medicaid In Budget, Feb. 20, 2025
Edwin Park, research professor at Georgetown, Same Playbook: Major Medicaid Cuts under Consideration for Budget Reconciliation Similar to Medicaid Cuts in Failed ACA Repeal Bills from 2017, Feb. 24, 2025
New York TImes, What Can House Republicans Cut Instead of Medicaid? Not Much. Feb. 25, 2025
AP, Rep. Al Green shouts down Trump and may face censure by the House for the outburst, March 5, 2025
General Accountability Office, Medicare and Medicaid: Additional Actions Needed to Enhance Program Integrity and Save Billions, April 16, 2024
Medicaid.gov, October 2024 Medicaid & CHIP Enrollment Data Highlights, 2024
Congressional Budget Office, Letter Re: Mandatory Spending Under the Jurisdiction of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, March 5, 2025
Washington Post, Some Republicans fear Medicaid cuts could cost them their jobs, Feb. 27, 2025
HuffPost, GOP Sen. Josh Hawley Warns Against 'Massive' Medicaid Cuts: 'I Don't Like The Idea' Feb. 19, 2025
Email interview, Allison Orris, senior Fellow and the Director of Medicaid Policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, March 4 and 7, 2025
Speaker Mike Johnson’s YouTube channel, Speaker Johnson Joins The Source With Kaitlan Collins, Feb. 26, 2025
Email interview, Joan Alker, executive director of the Center for Children and Families and a Research Professor at the Georgetown McCourt School of Public Policy. Georgetown, March 3 and 7, 2025
Email interview, Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at KFF, a health policy organization, March 3 and 7, 2025
Email interview, Andy Schneider, research professor of the practice at the Georgetown Center for Children and Families, March 7, 2025
Email interview, Joe Antos, senior fellow emeritus at the American Enterprise Institute, March 3 and 7, 2025