Trump, tax cut
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When Michelle Lawrence heard about Medicaid cuts in the Republican tax and spending bill, it felt like “a punch to the gut.”
Ohio will get a boost in Medicaid funding, but patients could still lose care or face barriers under a new federal law.
U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson looks at U.S. President Donald Trump signing the sweeping spending and tax legislation, known as the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," to mark Independence Day, at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 4, 2025.
Medicaid cuts from President Trump's "big, beautiful bill" will not take effect until after the midterms. However, there is concern in the GOP over how the megabill will impact the 2026 elections. Punchbowl News co-founder Jake Sherman,
President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill delivers the largest tax cuts in decades. But the benefits aren’t evenly distributed, and some taxpayers will gain far more than others.
Experts are warning that cuts the One Big Beautiful Bill Act makes to Medicaid pose a significant threat to rural hospitals, but hospitals across Virginia are bracing for the impact. Chesapeake Regional Healthcare,
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates President Trump's "big, beautiful bill" will add $3 trillion to the deficit.To pay for that, lawmakers made deep cuts to safety net programs, including Medicaid,
The Center for American Progress and The Arc break down the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, exposing how its deep cuts to Medicaid and Medicare will lead to benefit losses, increased paperwork requirements,
Presented by AstraZeneca{beacon} Health Care Health Care The Big Story Hospitals brace for ‘big, beautiful’ Medicaid cuts Hospitals loudly raised alarms about Trump’s tax
8don MSN
Trump has signed the "big, beautiful" bill, enacting sweeping changes to programs like SNAP and Medicaid. Here's what Tennesseans should know.
How a handful of Republicans learned to stop worrying and love the ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ after switching their votes - Republicans who thought the spending cuts were insufficient or that the bill cut too much into Medicaid suddenly seem at ease with their vote,