logo
Medicaid cuts in Republican bill emerge as an early flash point for the 2026 elections

Medicaid cuts in Republican bill emerge as an early flash point for the 2026 elections

NBC News29-05-2025
WASHINGTON — Early battle lines are forming over a centerpiece of the sprawling domestic policy bill that House Republicans narrowly passed, with Medicaid spending cuts emerging as a flash point that could define the 2026 midterm elections.
Democrats are fine-tuning their message as they blast the legislation, which now heads to the GOP-led Senate, as a tax cut for the wealthy that would be funded by cutting health care, after Republicans broadly promised they wouldn't cut Medicaid.
A recent memo from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee vows to make the GOP's 'tax scam' and Medicaid cuts 'the defining contrast of the 2026 election cycle' in its efforts to win the House majority next year.
The DCCC is advising Democratic candidates to criticize the Republican bill as a Trojan horse designed to throw millions off of Medicaid — not address waste — with new red tape, said a separate source with knowledge of the private conversations.
And Republicans are trying to frame the fight on their terms. The National Republican Congressional Committee is advising members to tout the bill as 'strengthening Medicaid' by limiting the program to those who need it — 'not fraudsters, able-bodied adults who refuse to work, or illegal immigrants.'
Underneath the clash is a wonky debate about what, exactly, constitutes a Medicaid 'cut.'
Republicans insist they aren't directly cutting benefits for low-income and disabled people, so their bill shouldn't be defined as a cut. Democrats and outside critics say it would strip away coverage for millions of people, including those who need the program the most, who would fall through the cracks if they can't meet the new bureaucratic requirements to keep proving their eligibility.
The bulk of the cost savings would come from strict new rules to maintain eligibility for Medicaid, which would require adult recipients to prove they're working or engaging in 'community service' for at least 80 hours per month, with limited exceptions that include pregnant women. That rule would kick in at the end of 2026. Other new rules would involve verifying addresses, proving lawful immigration status and screening eligibility more frequently, once every six months, instead of once a year.
The bill would impose about $700 billion in cuts to Medicaid relative to current law, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, and rescind health coverage for about 8.6 million people. (The estimate was based on the work requirement's beginning in 2029, before it was moved up in the revised bill, meaning the uninsured number could be larger.)
Still, Republicans are seeking to steer the debate toward the work requirements, which surveys say voters generally support for able-bodied adults, and selling the bill as an attempt to return Medicaid to those who need it the most.
Asked to respond to the GOP argument on the bill's work requirements, DCCC spokesperson Viet Shelton said in an email: 'House Republicans got caught lying about their vote to rip health care away from millions of people and are now scrambling to change the subject. Their tax scam bill was specifically designed to be the largest cut to Medicaid in history and Republicans are now stuck in a doomloop debating how many and how quickly people will get kicked off their health insurance — not if.'
The politics of the escalating fight could prompt Senate Republicans to make changes to the bill. Some have already expressed discomfort with the changes proposed for Medicaid, though they broadly favor work requirements and don't count them as 'cuts.'
President Donald Trump has similarly said he doesn't want to cut Medicaid, yet he championed the House legislation. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee released a digital ad last week describing the GOP Medicaid policies as 'devastating.'
Americans favor work requirements, but the support is soft
A recent national survey by KFF, a nonpartisan health research group, highlights the nuances of the issue.
Overall, the poll found that 62% of U.S. adults support new legislation 'requiring nearly all adults to work or be looking for work in order to get health insurance through Medicaid' — including 6 in 10 independents.
But the KFF poll found the support to be soft. It plummets to 32% when respondents hear the argument that most Medicaid recipients are already working or are unable to work. When respondents hear the argument that such new rules would raise administrative costs without significantly affecting the share of Medicaid recipients who are working, support drops to 40%.
There are other headwinds for Republicans.
Overall, the KFF poll found that Medicaid funding cuts are unpopular: 82% of respondents said they wanted Medicaid spending to increase or stay about the same, while just 17% said they want it to decrease. Even among Republican respondents, just 33% said Medicaid spending should be reduced.
The survey found that 3 in 4 U.S. adults said the legislation was about reducing government spending, while just one-fourth of them said it was about improving how Medicaid works.
Still, the GOP focus has tripped up at least one Democratic candidate. Manny Rutinel, who is eying the seat of freshman Rep. Gabe Evans, R-Colo., declined three times in an interview on NBC affiliate KUSA of Denver to say whether he favors work requirements for able-bodied adults.
'It was painful to watch,' said a national Democratic strategist, who spoke candidly on condition of anonymity.
The strategist said the onus is on Democrats to elevate the voices of regular people in their districts who would be harmed by the new rules and to make the case that 'people who need Medicaid are going to lose it because of what Republicans are doing.'
As top Democrats echo their successful message from the 2018 election cycle, whereas Republicans tried to repeal the Affordable Care Act and enacted the Trump tax cuts, some in the party warn that the dynamics are different this time.
The Republican 'message today is about requiring able-bodied Americans to work, preventing fraud and ensuring noncitizens are not covered,' said Ashley Schapitl, a former Democratic Senate communications aide. 'While Medicaid cuts poll horribly, these individual policies poll well. Democrats can still win the argument, but members need a sharp message and discipline around the issues of work requirements and immigration, not to feel complacent around rerunning the exact 2017 playbook.'
House Majority Forward, a political group focused on electing Democrats, launched a six-figure ad campaign Wednesday in 26 Republican-held districts, accusing those lawmakers of voting to raise prices for ordinary people through Medicaid cuts.
An ad running in Pennsylvania's 8th District says freshman GOP Rep. Rob Bresnahan 'just cast the deciding vote to raise the cost of your groceries and cut your health care including Medicaid — to pay for tax cuts for the ultra-rich.' A similar script is used against other incumbents, all of whom were pivotal in the 215-214 vote to pass the legislation last week and send it to the Senate.
Republicans, notably, are focusing a new ad campaign of their own on touting the bill's tax cuts, not its spending cuts.
The NRCC announced new ads Friday targeting 25 Democratic incumbents in competitive districts, saying they voted 'for the largest U.S. tax hike in generations' by opposing the bill that extends the expiring 2017 Trump tax cuts. The ad obliquely refers to citizenship verification for benefits, saying that under the status quo, 'illegals get freebies, you get the bill.'
The ad doesn't mention Medicaid.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EXCLUSIVE Watch Democrats squirm as they're grilled on who's REALLY leading their party as young 'communists' rise in ranks
EXCLUSIVE Watch Democrats squirm as they're grilled on who's REALLY leading their party as young 'communists' rise in ranks

Daily Mail​

time28 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Watch Democrats squirm as they're grilled on who's REALLY leading their party as young 'communists' rise in ranks

As President Donald Trump has racked up a string of major policy wins in his six months, Democrats are stuck in a rut without a clear party leader, they admitted in interviews with the Daily Mail. Though House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer are technically the left's top lawmakers, Democrats on Capitol Hill shared that there is still no consensus on who is the party's head. In the absence of a clear frontrunner to lead the party in 2028, Democrats are left to tout their current efforts resisting Trump. 'It's a group leadership at this point in time, obviously Hakeem, obviously Chuck Schumer, a lot of governors,' veteran Democrat Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland told the Daily Mail in an interview. 'I think there are a number of leaders.' Hoyer twice served as House Majority Leader under former Speaker Nancy Pelosi. He has served on Capitol Hill for over 43 years since 1981 and is the longest tenured Democrat in the House of Representatives. It's safe to say he's been around a while to witness the party in and out of power. 'When you don't have the presidency...I can't remember a time when there was a leader,' he continued. 'So I think it's a collective leadership.' Other Democrats flat-out admitted there is no clear head of the party. Hoyer told the Daily Mail that there are a number of Democratic leaders, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries. But his colleague, Rep. Moskowitz, said the party doesn't really have a leader at the moment A recent poll from Reuters/Ipsos found that 62 percent of Democratic voters want completely new leadership 'We don't have a counterpart in our party at the moment, because ... we're coming out of the last presidency,' Florida Democrat Rep. Jared Moskowitz told the Daily Mail. 'But no, we don't have a counterbalance at the moment.' The Floridian, known for his cool Air Jordan sneaker collection, noted that when Trump's term expires in 2028, both parties will be left searching for new leadership, ostensibly ignoring the platform JD Vance will have after serving as vice president. 'The Republicans, will be in the same boat, right?' Moskowitz said. Who will be the leader of the party? Because it won't be the president anymore.' In addition to Jeffries and Schumer, there are a number of Democrats who have been floated as the next party boss. On those lists are usually Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett, and occasionally, former VP Kamala Harris. Popular prediction sites Kalshi and Polymarket list Newsom as the most likely Democratic nominee for the 2028 presidential contest, AOC is listed as close second while former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg comes in third. Democrats have indicated they want new faces steering the party. According to a June poll from Reuters/Ipsos, 62 percent of self-identified Democrats agreed that 'the leadership of the Democratic Party should be replaced with new people.' That could be why Democratic candidate for New York mayor Zohran Mamdani, a self-declared democratic socialist, has been surging in the polls and landing countless TV interviews. 'Zohran Mamdani, the new leader of the Democratic Party, supports 'the abolition of private property' and 'seizing the means of production,' Republican Senator John Kennedy of Louisiana wrote this week. 'But Washington Democrats are still cozying up to him. There's no doubt about it: the loon wing is running the show.' Mamdani, 33, embodies a political archetype akin to former presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, also a self-declared democratic socialist. The young mayoral candidate has even caught the attention of the president. 'It's finally happened, the Democrats have crossed the line. Zohran Mamdani, a 100% Communist Lunatic, has just won the Dem Primary, and is on his way to becoming Mayor. We've had Radical Lefties before, but this is getting a little ridiculous,' Trump wrote recently on Truth Social. Mamdani met personally with AOC, along with about 40 other Democratic lawmakers this week in D.C. The meeting was an hour-long session on communicating and organizing hosted by AOC, the progressive leader of the 'Squad.' The venue had to change because of high demand from lawmakers to sit in on the session, a Mamdani spokesperson said. One longtime Democrat even likened Mamdani to Trump, saying they share a similar populist appeal. 'Donald Trump and he both get out and they talk to people and they listen to people and they understand how people feel. And he's using social media the way that Donald Trump has,' Rep. Debbie Dingell of Michigan said.

Elon Musk could upend the 2026 midterms and MAGA majority but THESE are the menacing roadblocks to his grand plan
Elon Musk could upend the 2026 midterms and MAGA majority but THESE are the menacing roadblocks to his grand plan

Daily Mail​

time28 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Elon Musk could upend the 2026 midterms and MAGA majority but THESE are the menacing roadblocks to his grand plan

Elon Musk is embracing the role of troublemaker for Republicans in the 2026 midterms, threatening to form a third-party that could play spoiler to the GOP 's effort of holding onto the Senate and House. July polling conducted for the Daily Mail by J.L. Partners found that while a Musk-backed party would only garner 4 percent support, it allowed the Democrats to have a 9-point advantage over the GOP in a generic House of Representatives ballot. The world's richest man clearly bears the resources to upend the traditional duopoly that's powered American politics for more than two centuries. What remains foggy is whether the tech titan holds the strategic focus, discipline and sheer will that such a daunting political undertaking will require. Especially in an epic showdown against the singular political force of one Donald J. Trump. If Musk's political drive matches the market capitalization of Tesla, he could create a movement that could easily kill the GOP majority. 'If Elon invests in half a dozen races, that could be the difference between the Republicans being in power and Hakeem Jeffries and AOC having the keys to power. And that is unacceptable,' said James Fishback, a former Department of Government Efficiency employee who's now funding an effort to stop Musk in his tracks. If his commitment mirrors his uneven stewardship of X, formerly known as Twitter, his third party movement won't be known for more than a viral meme. 'Third parties are nothing new to politics on any level. We already have the Libertarians, we already have the Green Party, we already have the Rent is Too Damn High party,' pointed out Hogan Gidley, an adviser to House Speaker Mike Johnson and a veteran of the first Trump administration. 'The political reality is it is extremely difficult to mount third party runs that are victorious because you don't have a natural base of voters of which to pull,' Gidley observed. 'He doesn't have the juice.' Musk also doesn't seem to yet have his ducks in a row. Despite his announcement on July 7 that he was officially forming the American Party, Musk has filed no paperwork to do so. An aide to Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie - who Musk signaled he would help defend from a Trump primary challenge - wasn't able to point the Daily Mail to any official outreach. And then there's Musk's own waning political popularity. CNN released a survey Friday showing him as the least popular public figure the network polled, with Musk's favorability plummeting a staggering 66 percentage points in just four months. Support for his third party registered at a paltry 25 percent. The entity that appears most outwardly excited about Musk's third party play is a group that's been struggling to find relevance for decades: Libertarians. 'Our position is that Elon should join up with the Libertarians for the simple fact that we have the most ballot access of any third party,' Steven Nekhaila, chair of the Libertarian National Committee, told the Daily Mail. It's extremely difficult to run winning candidates outside the two-party system due to differing and often confusing ballot access rules in every state. Many states require tens of thousands of signatures apportioned over specific geographic regions to qualify. 'I think Elon is going to be pleasantly displeased with just how difficult it is to actually get ballot access in a lot of states,' he continued. Both Musk and Libertarians see value in an electoral strategy where a small group of candidates can gain leverage in Congress - Nekhaila noted that electing just a handful could wield significant influence, as major parties would need their votes to pass legislation. Nekhaila also suggested Musk pursue a broad, anti-duopoly movement to attract centrist voters. Musk appears to be interested in that type of thing as he's been in touch with Andrew Yang, who's been active in the third-party space since launching his Forward Party in 2021. At the same time, nothing firm came out of the chatter. 'Yes, Andrew did speak with Elon and his team, but he has made no commitments or plans to collaborate on anything specific in the near or future term,' a source close to Yang told the Daily Mail. 'The line of communication remains open,' the source added. A spokesperson for Musk did not respond to Daily Mail questions inquiring when Musk would form his America Party and if he's considering joining the Libertarians. If Musk really wanted advice on the challenges in mounting a third-party, he could reach out to Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump's current Health and Human Services Secretary. After Kennedy announced he was mounting an independent bid for the White House, much of his campaign's time was sucked up seeking ballot access. For instance, the Kennedy campaign got a jump on collecting signatures in Nevada to get on the ballot, but because RFK Jr. hadn't announced a running mate yet they had to be tossed out. In the end, Kennedy only made the ballot in 15 states before he ended his campaign. Additionally, there are already Trump-aligned groups ready to combat any of Musk's efforts. In late June, two of Trump's top political advisers, Chris LaCivita and Tony Fabrizio, launched MAGA Kentucky, a super PAC designed with one purpose - damage Massie. One of MAGA Kentucky's first ads blasted Massie as an acolyte of uber-liberals Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and likening him to Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei for questioning Trump's bombing campaign of Iran. Musk vowed to help the libertarian congressman but has made no moves to since. Fishback, the CEO of the investment firm Azoria, poured a million dollars of his own money to a new super PAC that was named to troll Musk. The group is called FSD PAC as 'FSD' in Tesla parlance means 'full self-driving' cars. But in the political world, Fishback wanted the acronym to mean 'Full Support for Donald.' The PAC will deploy a whack-a-mole type strategy, waiting for Musk to pop his head up. If Musk funds a candidate, FSD PAC will finance the Trump-aligned alternative. 'It's a hedge,' Fishback explained to the Daily Mail. 'I hope, by the way, that this is simply an insurance policy,' he added. Trump has his own insurance policy - a massive war chest, with Fox News reporting in late June totals about $1.4 billion. 'This will likely be a headache for Republicans,' Republican strategist Ron Bonjean said of Musk's involvement. 'But with Trump being the fundraiser-in-chief and an already massive billion dollar war chest, money isn't going to be an issue.' However with Musk threatening to run primary challengers against MAGA-aligned Republicans Bonjean warned that 'candidate quality is going matter now more than ever in order to be successful.' Democrats are enthusiastic that Musk and any Musk-aligned candidates could potentially shine more light on two issue areas where they could benefit - the 'big, beautiful bill' and Jeffrey Epstein. 'The 'Big, Beautiful' tax law is Republicans' top liability because it breaks their promises to lower costs and stand up for working people. Musk's attacks on the BBB compound that problem,' observed Andrew Bates, the principal at Wolfpack Strategies, and a veteran of President Joe Biden's press shop. The White House's Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair shrugged off Musk's threats in a gaggle with reporters on Friday.

Japan ruling party loses majority in disastrous election result
Japan ruling party loses majority in disastrous election result

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Japan ruling party loses majority in disastrous election result

Japan's ruling coalition lost its majority in upper house elections on Sunday, exit polls projected, in a disastrous result for prime minister Shigeru Ishiba. Ishiba's Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and its partner Komeito won about 41 of the 125 seats contested, short of the 50 needed to retain a majority, local media said, with the populist party Sanseito projected to have made strong gains. The results will likely fuel political instability in the world's fourth largest economy as a tariff deadline with the United States looms. While the ballot does not directly determine whether prime minister Shigeru Ishiba's shaky minority government falls, it heaps pressure on the embattled leader who also lost control of the more-powerful lower house in October. The LDP, which has ruled Japan for most of the post-war period, had its worst showing in 15 years in October's lower house election. That has left Ishiba vulnerable to no-confidence motions that could topple his administration and trigger a fresh general election.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store