What will be the deficit reduction by Medicaid and tax policy changes by 2026?
Less than $2 trillion • 25%
$2-3 trillion • 25%
$3-4 trillion • 25%
More than $4 trillion • 25%
Reports from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) or U.S. Treasury
House Republicans Propose $2.3 Trillion Medicaid Cuts Impacting 80 Million to Fund Billionaire Tax Breaks
Jan 14, 2025, 06:16 PM
House Republicans are reportedly planning significant cuts to Medicaid, aiming to reduce federal spending by $2.3 trillion over the next decade as part of a broader strategy to finance tax cuts for billionaires and large corporations. The proposed cuts include converting Medicaid's funding structure to a per-capita cap, which would limit federal funding to a fixed amount per beneficiary, potentially leading to reduced coverage and services. Other measures under consideration involve lowering the federal matching rate for Medicaid, including the Affordable Care Act (ACA) expansion match rate, and imposing work requirements. These changes could force states to either raise new revenues or cut Medicaid spending, affecting the 80 million Americans who rely on the program for health care. Additionally, the plan includes limiting the use of provider taxes, contributing to the overall $5.5 trillion in deficit reductions.
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Decrease deficit • 25%
Increase deficit by less than $2 trillion • 25%
Increase deficit by $2-4 trillion • 25%
Increase deficit by over $4 trillion • 25%
Less than $1 trillion • 25%
More than $2 trillion • 25%
$1.5 trillion to $2 trillion • 25%
$1 trillion to $1.5 trillion • 25%
No decision by end of 2025 • 25%
Rejected • 25%
Modified and approved • 25%
Approved as proposed • 25%
Cuts approved as proposed • 25%
Cuts approved with modifications • 25%
Cuts rejected • 25%
No decision by end of 2025 • 25%
Only dividend cut • 25%
Neither cut implemented • 25%
Both cuts implemented • 25%
Only capital gains cut • 25%
New tax cuts introduced • 25%
No significant changes • 25%
Tax increases implemented • 25%
Tax cuts extended • 25%
Eligibility restrictions • 25%
Across-the-board cuts • 25%
Program eliminations • 25%
Other • 25%
Approve with amendments • 25%
No vote by end of 2025 • 25%
Approve as is • 25%
Reject • 25%
Bipartisan support • 25%
Republicans • 25%
No significant support • 25%
Democrats • 25%
Coverage reduced by 10-20 million • 25%
Coverage reduced by over 20 million • 25%
Coverage remains unchanged • 25%
Coverage reduced by up to 10 million • 25%