Politics & Government

House Budget Bill Could Slash Medicaid: How MD Reps Voted

The GOP budget blueprint passed Tuesday evening calls for deep spending cuts, potentially including $880 billion to Medicaid.

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., arrives to talk to reporters after a closed-door meeting with fellow Republicans to find agreement on a spending bill.
Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., arrives to talk to reporters after a closed-door meeting with fellow Republicans to find agreement on a spending bill. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

MARYLAND — The Maryland delegation in the U.S. House overwhelmingly voted against a GOP budget blueprint Tuesday evening that calls for deep spending cuts, potentially including $880 billion to Medicaid, which more than 1.5 million of their constituents rely on for health coverage.

The resolution was a crucial step toward delivering President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” with $4.5 trillion in tax breaks and $2 trillion in spending cuts. It narrowly passed, 217-215, overcoming a wall of opposition from Democrats and discomfort among Republicans.

All Maryland Democrats joined members of their party to vote against the bill, while lone Republican Rep. Andy Harris voted in favor of it.

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“I voted YES on the budget framework that will secure our border, extend President Trump’s tax cuts and cut wasteful spending,” Harris said in a statement posted on X. “It is time for Congress to deliver on President Trump’s agenda.”

Only one Republican — Congressman Tom Massie of Kentucky — voted against the blueprint.

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The potentially largest cut to Medicaid in U.S. history could be a sticking point for some moderate Republicans in the long, cumbersome process ahead to pass the budget. That includes weeks of committee hearings to draft the details and send the House version to the Senate, where Republicans passed their own scaled-back version.

Medicaid is the primary comprehensive health and long-term care program used by 1 in 5 Americans, and accounts for nearly $1 out of every $5 spent on health care, according to KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation), an independent provider of health policy research, polling and news.

“House Republicans are proposing the largest cut to Medicaid in history. Their budget explodes the deficit and imposes hardship on working Americans,” Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-Maryland) said in a statement. “Democrats are standing together against the Republican budget plan. We must work together to lower costs for all Americans.”

In a statement, Rep. Johnny Olszewski (D-Maryland) said “the vote leaves no doubt.”

“House Republicans side with Donald Trump and Elon Musk over the American people,” he said.

Even as they press ahead, Republicans are running into a familiar problem: Slashing federal spending is typically easier said than done. With cuts to the Pentagon and other programs largely off limits, much of the other government outlays go for health care, food stamps, student loans and programs relied on by their constituents.

Several Republican lawmakers worry that scope of the cuts being eyed — particularly some $880 billion over the decade to the committee that handles health care spending, including Medicaid, for example, or $230 billion to the agriculture committee that funds food stamps — will be too harmful to their constituents back home.

GOP leaders insist Medicaid is not specifically listed in the initial 60-page budget framework, which is true; the proposal directs the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which oversees Medicaid, to cut $880 billion in spending over the next decade.

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana) and his leadership team also told lawmakers they would have plenty of time to debate the details as they shape the final package.

Medicaid is a valued safety net program, according to a recent KFF poll that showed 77 percent of Americans and 84 percent of Medicaid recipients view it favorably. Nearly half (46 percent) and two-thirds of Medicaid enrollees believe the federal government isn’t spending enough on the program, according to the poll.

According to data from KFF, Medicaid and CHIP (Children’s Health Insurance Program), of Medicaid recipients nationwide:

  • 82 percent are children living below the poverty level;
  • 62 percent are people living in nursing homes;
  • 41 percent are pregnant women giving birth;
  • 39 percent are children;
  • 31 percent are non-elderly adults with disabilities;
  • 19 percent are Medicare recipients.

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