Realist: news and analytics

Русский / English / العربية

  • News
  • Russia
  • Caucasus
  • Opinion
  • Interviews
  • Experts
No Result
View All Result
Realist: news and analytics
  • News
  • Russia
  • Caucasus
  • Opinion
  • Interviews
  • Experts
No Result
View All Result
Realist: news and analytics

Healthcare flashpoint: Obama sounds alarm on Republican plan

GOP legislation would cut Medicaid, marketplace subsidies and shift eligibility rules as part of broader tax agenda.

   
June 4, 2025, 06:19
People & Culture
South Korea elects opposition leader Lee Jae-myung as president, ending months of political crisis

WASHINGTON (Realist English). Former President Barack Obama has issued a rare public warning about efforts by Congressional Republicans to significantly weaken the Affordable Care Act, saying their latest legislative maneuver threatens healthcare access for millions of Americans.

“Congressional Republicans are trying to weaken the Affordable Care Act and put millions of people at risk of losing their health care,” Obama wrote on social media. “Call your Senators and tell them we can’t let that happen.”

His remarks come as the Senate prepares to consider a Republican-backed bill passed last month in the House. The bill, which is framed as an extension of Trump-era tax cuts, includes major reductions in Medicaid and ACA marketplace coverage. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the proposed changes would strip healthcare coverage from 10.7 million people over the next decade, making it the most sweeping rollback since the failed 2017 repeal effort.

Notably, the bill avoids explicit references to repealing the ACA. Instead, its impact is embedded in administrative and eligibility changes that critics argue would destabilize Medicaid and insurance markets.

Key provisions include:

  • Mandatory Medicaid eligibility verification every six months (currently annual).
  • New work requirements: at least 80 hours of employment per month for most adults.
  • Shorter enrollment windows, increasing the risk of procedural disenrollment.

Analysts say these measures would disproportionately affect low-income individuals and families. A study by KFF found that most adult Medicaid recipients already work, with just 8% unemployed and not in school or caregiving.

Even some Republicans are expressing unease. Senator Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), writing in The New York Times, called the proposal “morally wrong and politically suicidal.”

The bill also includes controversial provisions affecting insurers. It would restore federal cost-sharing payments for low-income plans—but only for companies that exclude abortion services. That restriction could disrupt markets in 12 states and Washington, D.C., where abortion coverage is required. AHIP, the top U.S. health insurance lobbying group, warned of “immediate instability” if the legislation passes without broader reforms or funding clarity.

Underlying the proposal is the Republican push to extend Trump’s expiring tax cuts, with healthcare cuts framed as a means to offset the cost. Since 2017, enrollment in Medicaid, CHIP, and ACA marketplaces has grown from 85 million to more than 100 million Americans, driving federal spending on healthcare from $550bn to over $900bn annually.

While Republican lawmakers argue they are targeting fraud and inefficiency, critics point out that the bill provides no new funding for anti-fraud initiatives. Former President Donald Trump, defending the cuts, told NBC: “They’re looking at fraud, waste, and abuse. And nobody minds that.”

This legislative push reflects a broader strategy to reshape U.S. healthcare through fiscal levers rather than headline repeal. The scope of the cuts and their alignment with tax policy goals suggest that healthcare may again become a defining issue in the 2025 political landscape—especially if millions stand to lose coverage in the process.

Barack ObamaUnited StatesUS Domestic Policy
Previous Post

Carney pledges support for oil sector and emissions cuts as Canada repositions for Trump-era trade

Next Post

South Korea elects opposition leader Lee Jae-myung as president, ending months of political crisis

Related Posts

China vows closer ties with Tanzania, reaffirms support for African sovereignty
People & Culture

Erdogan urges Turks to have more children, warns of looming demographic crisis

12 January, 2026
Khamenei says Iran will not retreat in face of foreign-backed unrest
People & Culture

Public opinion in Japan splits over future of Self-Defense Forces amid security concerns

10 January, 2026
Patriarch Kirill delivers Christmas address at Moscow cathedral
People & Culture

Patriarch Kirill delivers Christmas address at Moscow cathedral

7 January, 2026
Ukraine appoints Oleh Ivashchenko as new military intelligence chief
People & Culture

Rare Roman-era bathtub unearthed in ancient Ephesus

3 January, 2026
Iran steps up repression of religious minorities after war with Israel
People & Culture

Iran steps up repression of religious minorities after war with Israel

26 December, 2025
Photo showing Trump’s face disappears from DOJ Epstein files release
People & Culture

Photo showing Trump’s face disappears from DOJ Epstein files release

21 December, 2025
Most Popular
Most Popular
US Treasury chief says sanctions helped trigger Iran unrest

US Treasury chief says sanctions helped trigger Iran unrest

22 January, 2026

DAVOS (Realist English). US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has publicly acknowledged that American sanctions played a role in destabilising Iran’s...

Bulgarian president Rumen Radev announces resignation amid political turmoil

Oxfam warns billionaire wealth hits record as inequality deepens

20 January, 2026

LONDON (Realist English). The combined wealth of the world’s billionaires has climbed to a record $18.3 trillion, with the super-rich...

Nearly 4,000 killed in Iran protests, rights group says

Nearly 4,000 killed in Iran protests, rights group says

19 January, 2026

TEHRAN (Realist English). At least 3,919 people have been killed during the recent wave of protests in Iran and the...

Committee for the Defense of the AAC in Bratislava Calls for Release of Detained Clergy

Committee for the Defense of the AAC in Bratislava Calls for Release of Detained Clergy

18 January, 2026

BRATISLAVA (Realist English). A meeting of the Committee for the Defense of the Armenian Apostolic Church (AAC) and Christianity in...

Opinion

Armenian monastery Dadivank

Dadivank: The Legacy of Christ’s Apostles in Artsakh

17 December, 2025

YEREVAN (Realist English). In Artsakh, before the ethnic cleansing and forced deportation – simply put, genocide – carried out by...

An unusual phenomenon at the Church of the Holy Savior in Shushi

An unusual phenomenon at the Church of the Holy Savior in Shushi

3 November, 2025

YEREVAN (Realist English). In the distant year 1979, as a third-year university student, I used to visit the Church of...

War with Iran seen as inevitable, Armenia warned of looming regional storm

War with Iran seen as inevitable, Armenia warned of looming regional storm

21 September, 2025

YEREVAN (Realist English). The war with Iran is drawing ever closer. And once again, this pulls Armenia into a zone...

Putin, Trump and Zelensky: is a trilateral meeting necessary?

Putin, Trump and Zelensky: is a trilateral meeting necessary?

27 August, 2025

MOSCOW (Realist English). Although more than a week has passed since the meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S....

All rights reserved.

© 2017-2025

  • About Us
  • Mission and Values
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

Follow Realist English

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Russia
  • Caucasus
  • Opinion
  • Interviews
  • Experts

Русский / English / العربية