Arkansas and Georgia both imposed job requirements for Medicaid recipients. Advocates said the programs added red tape and administrative costs.
Only 6,500 participants have enrolled in a program that has cost taxpayers more than $86 million — a warning for other states looking to impose restrictions on Medicaid in a second Trump presidency.
Georgia Democratic Sens. Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock are addressing the impact of proposed Republican cuts to Medicaid on ordinary Georgians.
Over half a million Georgians have lost coverage due to the nationwide "unwinding" process that began after the COVID pandemic.
The Democratic U.S. senator is running for reelection in 2026 in what will likely be one of the most hotly contested races in the country.
The Trump administration will likely allow states to impose Medicaid work requirements, but some states have found it to be complicated.
Republican lawmakers could try to siphon billions of dollars from the nearly-free health care coverage offered to the poorest Americans.
Republicans are weighing billions of dollars in cuts to Medicaid, jeopardizing health care coverage for some of the 80 million U.S. adults and children enrolled in the safety net program
Other cuts on the table include a proposal to change the federal government’s reimbursement to a per-person limit. That would shift the costs to states, which might be forced to make tough
As the 90-day session comes closer to an end, the idea of Medicaid expansion isn't looking very promising this year in Mississippi.
The Georgia congressman begged the raucous crowd to stop “screaming” as they repeatedly interrupted and booed him.
He’s enrolled in Georgia’s Pathways to Coverage plan, which offers Medicaid for a slice of impoverished people who make just too much to qualify for traditional Medicaid. Georgia, which has ...
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