House committees advance reconciliation text with big impacts on healthcare

House committees advance reconciliation text with big impacts on healthcare

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The Energy and Commerce and Ways and Means committees held marathon markups and voted along party lines this week to advance Republican legislation containing a number of healthcare provisions, including sweeping cuts to Medicaid.

The bill is likely to be tweaked in the full House or Senate. Still, GOP members cheered the advance of the “big, beautiful bill,” which marries an extension of tax cuts from President Donald Trump’s first term with other conservative priorities, like cracking down on illegal immigration and canceling clean energy initiatives.

But to pay for the package, Republicans had to pen significant funding reductions, including in healthcare. The most drastic reforms are targeted at the safety-net Medicaid program: Provisions out of E&C total $625 billion in savings but would cause roughly 8 million Americans to become uninsured, according to a preliminary estimate from the Congressional Budget Office.

Patient advocacy groups and healthcare providers condemned the legislation for gutting federal support for health insurance programs, which will have a disproportionate impact on low-income Americans, women, immigrants and people with disabilities.

Democrats also slammed the bill as cutting services for the poor to fund tax breaks for the rich — the largest portion of the tax reductions would go to the highest-earning American households — but ultimately failed to water down the legislation before it left the committees.

E&C passed on its text in a 30-24 vote after more than 26 hours in a markup meeting, while Ways and Means advanced its own provisions on a 26-19 vote after 17 hours. The legislation now heads to the House Budget Committee, which will combine it into one package. Republicans have set a deadline of Memorial Day for passage by the House and early July for passage by the Senate, where Republicans are more cautious about cutting health and social benefit programs and could moderate the bill.

Here are the legislation’s major healthcare provisions.

Medicaid

E&C approved the biggest overhaul to Medicaid in the program’s six-decade history. If the legislation passes as currently drafted, it would significantly alter eligibility and funding for Medicaid, which, along with its sister program for children, covers almost 80 million low-income Americans.

Republicans cleared what would be the first-ever federal work requirements for Medicaid beneficiaries. The policy requires able-bodied adults to work, volunteer or attend school for at least 80 hours each month to continue using Medicaid coverage.

The goal is to reduce freeloading in Medicaid and refocus the program around the truly needy, Republicans said.

“We make no apologies for prioritizing Americans in need over illegal immigrants and those who are capable but choose not to work,” E&C Chairman Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., said Tuesday during the committee’s markup.

However, the large majority of Medicaid members already work or would qualify for exemptions, according to research. Many people would likely instead lose coverage due to difficulties reporting their eligibility with their states. Work requirements, in the small handful of cases when they’ve actually been enacted, have also been pricey for states to implement and oversee, and haven’t increased employment.

The work requirements wouldn’t kick in until 2029. The delay is a source of friction for some GOP hardliners, who’d like the policy to begin earlier. However, it pushes back the requirements until after Trump has left office and incumbents in Congress have already run for reelection, insulating Republicans from voter pushback — a trend with other unpopular policies of the legislation.

The bill also requires Medicaid beneficiaries with incomes at or above the federal poverty line to pay more fees to receive certain care, an about-face for a program that doesn’t typically include cost-sharing.

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