Trump’s Proposed Budget Slices Safety Net For Poor, Disabled
President Donald Trump wants to slash Medicaid by more than $800 billion and slim down the Children's Health Insurance Program, as well.
The Associated Press:
Trump Administration Sending Congress $4.1 Trillion Budget
President Donald Trump is sending Congress a $4.1 trillion spending plan that relies on faster economic growth and steep cuts in a range of support programs for low-income individuals to balance the government’s books over the next decade. (Taylor and Crutsinger, 5/23)
The Washington Post:
Trump’s Budget Proposal Slashes Spending By $3.6 Trillion Over 10 Years
President Trump on Tuesday will propose cutting federal spending by $3.6 trillion over 10 years, a historic budget contraction that would severely ratchet back spending across dozens of programs and could completely reshape government assistance to the poor. The White House’s $4.094 trillion budget request for fiscal 2018 calls for cuts that hit Medicaid, food assistance and other anti-poverty programs. It would cut funding for the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), which provides benefits to the poor, by roughly 20 percent next year. (Paletta and Costa, 5/22)
The Wall Street Journal:
Trump’s Budget Seeks Cuts To Taxes, Safety-Net Programs
Among the reductions, the president’s budget proposes $250 billion in saving over a decade through the repeal and replacement of the Affordable Care Act, President Barack Obama’s signature legislative policy. Those savings would come largely through reductions to Medicaid, the federal-state health insurance program for low-income people. Other unspecified reforms to Medicaid and the federal Children’s Health Insurance Program would shave another $616 billion from government spending through 2027. (Nicholas, Davidson and Timiraos, 5/22)
The New York Times:
Trump’s Budget Cuts Deeply Into Medicaid And Anti-Poverty Efforts
Over the next decade, it calls for slashing more than $800 billion from Medicaid, the federal health program for the poor, while slicing $192 billion from nutritional assistance and $272 billion over all from welfare programs. And domestic programs outside of military and homeland security whose budgets are determined annually by Congress would also take a hit, their funding falling by $57 billion, or 10.6 percent. The plan would cut by more than $72 billion the disability benefits upon which millions of Americans rely. It would eliminate loan programs that subsidize college education for the poor and those who take jobs in government or nonprofit organizations. (Davis, 5/22)
The Hill:
Trump Budget To Call For $610 Billion In Medicaid Cuts
The proposal would transition the joint federal-state program from a traditional entitlement to either a block grant or per capita cap. It would also allow states to impose work requirements for certain Medicaid beneficiaries. “This proposal will free States to advance solutions that best serve their unique populations — for example, encouraging work, promoting personal responsibility, and meeting the spectrum of diverse needs of their Medicaid populations,” the budget document said. (Weixel, Roubein and Hellmann, 5/22)
The Washington Post:
Trump To Poor Americans: Get To Work Or Lose Your Benefits
Making low-income Americans work to qualify for so-called welfare programs is a key theme of the budget. “If you are on food stamps and you are able bodied, we need you to go to work,” said budget director Mick Mulvaney during a White House briefing on Monday. He said the strengthened requirements in the budget focuses on putting the 6.8 million unemployed or underemployed Americans back to work. “There is a dignity to work,” he said, “and there’s a necessity to work to help the country succeed.” (Dewey and Jan, 5/22)
The New York Times:
Trump Budget Cuts Programs For Poor While Sparing Many Older People
Taken together, the cuts represent a significant reordering of the social safety net, away from poor families and toward older Americans, regardless of income. Medicare would be untouched, and the main function of Social Security — retirement income — would flow unimpeded. (Alcindor, 5/22)
Los Angeles Times:
Trump Budget Shows Tiny Surplus In 10 Years, With Rosy Economic Forecast And Trillions In Domestic Cuts
The budget to be released Tuesday will show that the annual federal deficit, which was $585 billion in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, will steadily decline until fiscal year 2027, when the nation will have a $16-billion surplus — the first since the start of the George W. Bush administration, though small in the context of what by then would be a nearly $6-trillion budget. (Bennett, 5/22)
USA Today:
Trump Says Budget Can Balance With Major Cuts To Safety-Net Programs
[E]ven if Congress goes along with the budget the president will send to Capitol Hill on Tuesday — which is unlikely — it requires rosy economic assumptions to work. (Groppe, 5/22)
Detroit Free Press:
Trump Budget Cuts Food Stamps, Relies On Medicaid Reductions
Trump’s budget, like any other proposed by a president in recent years, is more of a statement of his priorities and policy beliefs than a document expected to approved as-is by Congress. The legislative branch is certain to come up with far different proposals through the appropriations process of horse-trading and House-Senate compromise. (Spangler, 5/22)
CQ Roll Call:
White House Pushes Medicaid, Children's Health Care Reductions
The budget proposes to extend funding for CHIP for two additional years through fiscal 2019. It calls for eliminating an extra 23 percentage point increase in the federal matching rate that the health care law had provided to states. It also would cap the matching rate so that states that want to expand the program would no longer get federal funds for kids in families with income that is more than 250 percent of the federal poverty level. “These provisions would return the focus of CHIP to the most vulnerable and low-income children,” says the budget. Some state officials in both parties are likely to oppose the reductions in CHIP funding. (Young, 5/22)
McClatchy:
Trump's Budget Could Cut Medicaid, Children's Health And Food Stamps
“This budget sort of sits on top of what is done in the AHCA, which is to cut Medicaid by a large amount, cut the Affordable Care Act subsidies by another $300 billion and provide a big tax break for corporations and wealthy people,” said Judith Solomon, vice president for health policy at the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. “It’s taking from the poor to confer benefits on the rich. . . . So it’s Robin Hood in reverse,” Solomon said. (Pugh, 5/22)
Politico:
Trump's Budget Hits His Own Voters Hardest
The budget proposal underscores the wide gulf between campaigning and governing, even for a president who promised to rewrite the presidential rule book. (Restuccia, Nussbaum and Ferris, 5/22)
Meanwhile, Stat offers an explainer on where that Medicaid money is going —
Stat:
Where Does All Of Medicaid's Money Go? An Explainer
That proposal assumes that the American Health Care Act — passed by the House earlier this month — will become law. That’s far from a sure thing, given big questions about the Senate’s plans for health care reform. But if Medicaid is going to be slashed, it’s worth taking a look at exactly how the program spends its money now. After all, Medicaid accounts for $1 out of every $6 spent on health care in the US. But there are major differences in what that spending looks like on a state-by-state level. And certain services cost Medicaid far more than others. (Thielking, 5/22)