On July 4, President Trump signed into law a budget reconciliation package once called the “One Big, Beautiful Bill” that includes significant changes to the Medicaid program. This issue brief provides an overview of the Medicaid work requirement provisions.| KFF
Health care has proved a vulnerable target for the firehose of cuts and policy changes President Donald Trump ordered in the name of reducing waste and improving efficiency. But most of the impact isn’t as tangible as, say, higher egg prices at the grocery store.| Healthbeat
Rep. Tom Kean Jr.'s support for Medicaid cuts targeting "waste, fraud, and abuse" raises concerns about the impact on low-income New Jerseyans.| nj
By Jennifer M. Haley, Genevieve M. Kenney, Eva H. Allen, and Michael Karpman Work requirements in Medicaid are on the agenda at the federal level and in multiple states, despite evidence that they …| Center For Children and Families
I Oversaw Work Requirements in Michigan - Here is What I Told Congress| donmoynihan.substack.com
Politicians said work requirements would get people back to work. They’ll actually kick poor and working people off Medicaid.| Mountain State Spotlight
Republicans from President Trump on down are trying to hide the ball on how much they want to cut federal Medicaid payments to states and how they would go about doing so. But as my colleague Edwin…| Center For Children and Families
Georgia Pathways costs more than $100 million, with only $26 million spent on health benefits.| The Voice
Work requirements led to thousands in Arkansas losing their Medicaid during the first Trump administration. Policymakers say they’ve learned lessons to avoid mistakes this time.| Tradeoffs
Trump's "big" bill puts Medicaid on the chopping block. From work requirements to loss of coverage, here are Pittsbughers' concerns.| Pittsburgh's Public Source
It’s true that many voters have short memories. But other Republicans fear this time may be different.| MSNBC.com
Summary:| Carolina Forward
Republicans say that able-bodied adults who don’t work would lose Medicaid coverage under the House tax-cuts-and-spending bill, while Democrats say the legislation would hurt vulnerable groups. The bill’s main target is those able-bodied adults, but other groups would lose coverage due to paperwork burdens and other provisions in the bill, health policy experts say.| FactCheck.org
Republicans are likely to attack benefits for low-income adults, not the elderly, children or the disabled| xpostfactoid.substack.com