The Midnight Medicaid Cuts: Why The GOP’s Reconciliation Bill Is A Raw Deal For The American People
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The Midnight Medicaid Cuts: Why The GOP’s Reconciliation Bill Is A Raw Deal For The American People

Government Debt Ceiling
Source: Douglas Rissing / Getty

In the early hours of the morning, while most Americans were asleep, House Republicans convened a hearing that stretched into an eight-hour marathon to push through a sweeping 1,100-page reconciliation bill. 

The timing was no coincidence. It was a calculated attempt to avoid scrutiny and quietly advance a legislative agenda that disproportionately benefits the wealthy, undermines essential public services, and fuels divisive culture wars.

This bill is not about economic growth or fiscal responsibility. It’s the latest chapter in a long-standing political grift: one where working families are told to tighten their belts while the powerful receive handouts disguised as policy.

At the heart of the bill are aggressive cuts to Medicaid and food assistance—critical lifelines for millions of Americans. By moving up the timeline for mandatory work requirements to 2026, House Republicans are putting an estimated 14 million people at risk of losing their healthcare and three million households in danger of losing food security. These aren’t just numbers—they represent real families who are already navigating an economy marked by uncertainty, inflation, and widening inequality.

Meanwhile, the bill remains generous to the wealthiest Americans, offering trillions in tax breaks to those who need them least. But it doesn’t stop there. In a bizarre twist, it also includes a provision to create $1,000 “Trump Accounts” for babies born between 2025 and 2029. Ostensibly designed to support long-term savings, these MAGA-branded investment funds are more about political branding than substantive policy. It’s a campaign slogan masquerading as a fiscal tool.

Simultaneously, the bill strips healthcare access from some of the country’s most vulnerable populations. It imposes a sweeping ban on Medicaid and CHIP funding for gender-affirming care, not just for minors, but for all recipients. This isn’t about protecting public funds; it’s a targeted attack on the transgender community, one that erodes the foundational principle that healthcare should be accessible to all.

And if the stakes weren’t high enough, the bill also includes provisions that compromise public safety. Language quietly added in the final hours eliminates the federal tax and registration requirement for gun silencers, long established as safeguards to help law enforcement trace weapons used in violent crimes. As Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon (D-Pa.) noted, this change is not just reckless—it’s radical.

Even more troubling, an earlier draft of the bill included language that would have shielded former President Trump and his administration from contempt citations if they violated court orders. While the provision was ultimately removed, its mere presence reflects a dangerous willingness to circumvent the judiciary and concentrate power in the executive branch.

The bill also threatens access to reproductive and preventative health services by targeting Planned Parenthood. If passed, up to one-third of Planned Parenthood health centers—nearly 200 facilities—could be forced to close due to funding restrictions tied to abortion and gender-affirming care. This would severely limit access to cancer screenings, birth control, and general health care in underserved communities.

One of the most telling moments during the hearing, Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández (D-N.M.) held Republicans accountable for the sheer absurdity—and hypocrisy—of their priorities. When questioning a provision that repealed the federal excise tax on indoor tanning services, she asked the bill’s sponsor to read the line item aloud. He refused. 

“Oh, he doesn’t want to read it,” Rep. Leger Fernández said. “This is in their bill. They don’t want to read a line from their own bill.” 

Fernández then delivered a blistering critique: “So if you have a tanning bed, you get a little bit of a tax break. And if you need a hospital bed in rural America, I’m sorry, you’re out of luck.” 

Her words underscored the bill’s deeply skewed values, where luxury perks are prioritized over basic healthcare access.

This is not a comprehensive plan for economic recovery or public well-being. It’s a deeply flawed document that prioritizes political loyalty, culture war distractions, and corporate interests over the everyday needs of American families. It represents the erosion of public trust, transparency, and responsible governance.

While some provisions—such as the nonprotection of public lands in Utah and Nevada—were rightfully removed, and attempts to strip federal employees of earned retirement benefits were reversed, these adjustments cannot redeem a bill that is fundamentally out of step with the priorities of the American people.

As this bill heads to the Senate, lawmakers—and the public—must remain vigilant. Because this isn’t just bad policy. It’s a dangerous precedent. Governance should be transparent, equitable, and rooted in service to the people, not pushed through under the cover of darkness to serve the ambitions of a few.

The American people deserve better.

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