Last week, the Senate passed a budget blueprint that laid the foundation for cutting back healthcare and other important programs. Today, the house voted to move forward with those deep cuts.
The budgetary measure passes 216-214, with Republicans Thomas Massey (KY) and Victoria Spartz (IN) joining Democrats and opposed it.
Once the same budget resolution is in place, lawmakers begin work on creating the bill itself.
Once the same budget resolution is in place, lawmakers begin work on creating the bill itself.
The House vote was slightly delayed as several Republicans opposed the $4 billion savings target set for a Senate committee. These numbers usually coincide with the settlement budget resolution. This dispersion was an attempt to keep the process moving within the boundaries of House religion.
The Senate threshold is set to maximize flexibility and will exceed that if expected, but the home holdout wanted assurance that the final bill would approximate their vision. They eventually boarded the Senate pass budget after Mike Johnson and Senator majority leader John Tune. I pledged to seek at least $1.5 trillion Reconciliation Package Savings – That Level Can’t reach Without significantly reducing important programs like Medicaid.
What are the budget resolutions?
At the heart of the blueprint is an extension of Trump’s tax cuts in 2017, with plans to enact a new tax cut of up to $1.5 trillion. Republicans are obscuring the financial implications of these policies by using untested budgetary gimmicks to assert that extensions are costly. Experts I assume that I don’t agree widely They add At least $4 trillion In the red.
The budget resolution will allow additional spending on military and border security, demanding billions of dollars (numbers) from committees handling healthcare and other important issues, including nutrition, housing, education, energy, and labor policy.
It will also raise the debt limits, which are sufficient to last beyond the 2026 midterm elections, about $5 trillion.
What happens next?
With the same budgetary resolution in place, the House and Senate can officially begin writing the bill. The decision on a major feature of looms is already underway. While traditional wisdom suggests that it could take months to create such a large bill, Republicans are paying attention to the deadline for the final passage.
Important programs at risk
As a lawmaker Think about what will be cut Medicaid is under threat to enact it. They are reportedly considering policies that will damage them, such as eligibility restrictions, funding rollbacks and access barriers. Other important programs, such as the Supplementary Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), are also at risk, and Medicare may also be active.
Furthermore, a cut to Medicaid is a reduction in Medicare. More than 12 million people with Medicare also receive health insurance through Medicaid. That’s Key payer for long-term service and support For those in need of home and community-based services and nursing home care, it also plays an important role in supporting Support family caregivers. Demand for these services is only expected to grow. According to Recent analysisBy 2060, 23% of the population will be over 65 (up from 15% in 2016), and 19 million Americans will be over 85 (up 198% since 2016).
Medicaid also makes Medicare more affordable, making it possible for millions of low-income enrollees, and mitigates costs through the Medicare Savings Program.
Medicaid also makes Medicare more affordable, enables care for millions of low-income people, and eases their costs Medicare Savings Program. Medicaid boosts the outcomes of enrollees by making people healthier and getting them out of hospitals. Save money on both Medicare and taxpayer dollars while strengthening the program.
Advocacy Alert
Simultaneous budget resolution sets a catastrophic phase of programs that help Americans build health and financial security. Among those hit hardest are low-income and moderate-income Americans.
Among those hit hardest are low-income and moderate-income Americans.
Become independent Analysis is shown Promised Changes I’ll do it Increases costs All of the healthcare and groceries for the people who can’t afford it, to pay for tax cuts that disproportionately benefit the best-income people. Families in the bottom 20% of their income range (less than $14,000 a year) lose an average of $1,125 a year, or 5% of their income, while the top 1% of their income (over $650,000) earn close to $43,500 a year, or 2.9%. And so is the cut Shift cost to the statefurther service restrictions and economic fallouts may occur.
Take action now!
Members of the council will be home for a two-week break from Saturday, April 12th to Sunday, April 27th. It’s time for the vote to bring results and reminds us that the settlement bill will harm our members, districts and states. Learn more and take action today.