republicans

Logo

April 11, 2025

Senate In A Quandary Over Spending Cuts Conservatives and more moderate members are at odds in the upper chamber after President Trump and the House GOP held firm with a target of at least $1.5 trillion in spending cuts in the budget reconciliation process. Commitments by Trump and Johnson to rightists in the House was the only reason the bill passed. But Senate Majority Leader John Thune says he has a number of moderates and pragmatic conservatives who have warned that deep spending cuts in healthcare and other areas could mean they are off any final budget bill. Two of the members are in tight re-election campaigns in 2026, which could significantly erode the Senate GOP majority if they lose. That said, insufficient cuts could doom the bill in the House and perhaps even in the Senate. #budgetreconciliation #spending #trump #congress https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/5243579-senate-republicans-divided-budget-cuts/?tbref=hp United Bullying Physicians To Pay Back Cyberattack Loans

Read More »
Logo

April 10, 2025

House Passes Senate Version Of Budget Reconciliation Framework The House passed the Senate’s watered-down budget reconciliation framework on a party-line 216-214 vote. While the spending threshold in the bill did not change (it is de minimis), enough conservative Republicans jumped back on the bill after meetings with and pressure from House Speaker Mike Johnson, Senate Majority Leader Jon Thune, and President Trump. Conservatives are distrusting but got commitments from Trump and Johnson that as much as $1.5 trillion in cuts will be in the bill. Senate Leader Jon Thune gave a much softer commitment on levels of cuts. The House vote likely means that Congress will go after deeper cuts than not. Also controversial is the Senate bill assumes “current policy” not “current law” for budget scoring, which many, including I, call a gimmick that could lead to huge increases in deficits and debt in the future. The ongoing process

Read More »

Final 2026 Announcement for Medicare Advantage and Part D Boosts Rate Hike

Rates surge to relief of Medicare Advantage (MA) plans On April 7, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued the 2026 Final Announcement for Medicare Advantage (MA) and Part D plans. This annual announcement outlines the rates and other technical rate-setting details for the coming year as well as the final Star measures and details for Star Year 2026. In addition, the notice outlines potential changes to Star and display measures moving forward. This blog covers the non-Star issues in the Final Announcement – largely rates for 2026. On Monday, I will publish a blog in conjunction with Lilac Software on the final announcement from the standpoint of Stars changes. This will detail all the final Star measure changes, updates, and information discussed in the 2026 final MA and Part D Rule (released April 4) and the April 7 Final Announcement. 2026 MA rate proposal When the outgoing

Read More »
Logo

April 9, 2025

House GOP Abandons Budget Reconciliation Vote Tonight House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-LA, abandoned a vote on Senate reconciliation bill framework after rebellion by conservatives would have sunk the vote. Conservatives are upset by the Senate framework that has almost no spending reductions. In addition, the bill adopts a current-policy vs. current-law scoring of spending and taxes. The conservatives say the budget gimmick is disingenuous and would set a horrible precedent and drive up deficits and the national debt. The conservatives said they couldn’t move forward as they do not believe the Senate will agree to deep cuts if they pass the framework. The House GOP will now regroup on the issue and see if they can gather votes later in the week to pass the framework. Additional article: https://www.modernhealthcare.com/politics-policy/house-budget-resolution-medicaid-tax-cuts (Some articles may require a subscription.) #budgetreconciliation #congress #trump #spending #medicaid #healthcare https://thehill.com/homenews/house/5241418-johnson-vote-trump-budget-blueprint-conservative-opposition Study Pushes Back On MedPAC Assertions A new

Read More »
Logo

April 8, 2025

Trump Backs Deep Spending Cuts Emerging from a meeting with Speaker Mike Johnson, R-LA, and House Republicans, President Trump declared he is supportive of major spending cuts. The meeting was meant to allay concerns of rightists in the House GOP caucus. Trump wrote on Truth Social: “I let them know that, I AM FOR MAJOR SPENDING CUTS! WE ARE GOING TO DO REDUCTIONS, hopefully in excess of $1 Trillion Dollars, all of which will go into ‘The One, Big, Beautiful Bill.’” Trump urged the House GOP to support a watered-down budget reconciliation framework from the Senate in the meantime but promised to help assemble meaningful reductions, most of them likely from healthcare. Trump said he would “be pushing very hard” to get deeper cuts. The budget bill looks to be a battle of the House and conservatives against the Senate and some more moderates who disagree on the level of

Read More »
Logo

April 7, 2025

Medicare Advantage Plans Getting Higher Rates For 2026 The 2026 Medicare Advantage (MA) Final Notice was released this evening by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). After the Advance Notice in January, MA plans complained about a paltry rate hike of 2.23%. They asked the Trump administration to intervene and either tweak the risk model change phase-in or the one related to medical education reductions. Well, the Trump administration didn’t have to really do anything to drive up the 2026 rate. CMS did not change any policies on rates between the advance notice and final one. But the rate hike surged to 5.06% because the rate setting growth factor increased dramatically between the two notices. The change is projected to result in an increase of 5.06%, or over $25 billion, in MA payments to plans in CY 2026. MA plans and actuaries warned that trends in the program

Read More »

Final 2026 Medicare Advantage (MA) and Part D Rule Has Some But Not All Of Biden Proposals

Trump administration does not adopt much of Biden’s proposed 2026 rule As expected, the Trump administration has finalized some but not all of the former Biden administration’s massive proposed 2026 Medicare Advantage (MA) and Part D rule it issued in late November shortly before Biden’s term ended. In many ways, the proposed rule from Biden was a shot across the bow to Trump, laying out Biden’s views on key policy issues within MA and Part D. As is customary, succeeding administrations tend to scrutinize rules proposed or finalized late in the previous administration’s term and usually rescind, change, or modify proposals. This is because of philosophical differences as well as the sheer volume of rules that a new administration needs to go through in the first few months of settling in to govern. It is clear in the final rule for 2026 MA and Part D that the new Trump

Read More »
Logo

April 4, 2025

Trump Administration Finalizes Pared Back MA And Part D Rule for 2026 The 2026 Medicare Advantage (MA) and Part D rule was finalized by the new Trump administration and it did not finalize many portions of the Biden administration proposed rule. These could be acted on after further review or never see the light of day again. Significant things not finalized: CMS did finalize several things and this is by no means a full list: The Final Notice for rates and other Star measures should be out Monday as well. CMS Fact Sheet: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/contract-year-2026-policy-and-technical-changes-medicare-advantage-program-medicare-prescription-final Additional articles: https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payers/medicare-advantage-final-rule-excludes-anti-obesity-drug-coverage-under-medicare-medicaid and https://insidehealthpolicy.com/daily-news/trump-finalizes-prior-auth-hospital-stay-reqs-medicare-advantage-rule and https://insidehealthpolicy.com/daily-news/cms-declines-finalize-ma-ai-guardrails-expresses-interest-future-ai-regulation and https://thehill.com/homenews/5233357-medicare-medicaid-obesity-biden-trump/ and https://insidehealthpolicy.com/daily-news/cms-scraps-biden-plan-cover-anti-obesity-medications and https://www.modernhealthcare.com/policy/medicare-advantage-prior-authorization-ai (Some articles may require a subscription.) #medicareadvantage #partd #cms #regulations #star #quality #glp1s #priorauthorization https://www.modernhealthcare.com/politics-policy/medicare-obesity-drug-coverage-trump FTC Chair Reverses Recusal And PBM Suit Can Proceed Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chair Andrew Ferguson has reversed course on his decision to recuse himself from the agency’s

Read More »
Logo

April 3, 2025

Oz Confirmed By Senate Dr. Mehmet Oz, M.D., was approved by the Senate to serve as administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). The vote was along party lines, 53-45. Oz walks into an agency reeling from cutbacks by the Trump administration and layoffs. Meanwhile, a high-profile health influencer in the White House as a temporary employee appeared before a Politico health summit. Calley Means, close to health chief Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., said that the healthcare system has been plagued by inordinate influence from hospitals and drug makers and that CMS has been controlled by the American Medical Association (AMA). Means defended controversial HHS budget cuts and said that National Institutes of Health (NIH) research funding was not slashed. As well today, Sen. Susan Collins, R-ME, said she was very concerned about the prospects of deep Medicaid cuts given the House healthcare reduction target. Additional articles:

Read More »

Medicaid “Outlier” States And Their “Over-Expansion” Stuck In The Craw Of Conservatives

The GOP’s annoyance regarding benefit and coverage rich states could drive some budget reconciliation cuts President Donald Trump and GOP leaders in Congress have seemingly ruled out or at least backed away from major changes to Medicaid that would impact coverage. And sentiment seems to be turning away from deep Medicaid cuts. The House’s large GOP budget reconciliation healthcare spending reduction bogey is being challenged by the Senate, which has drafted a reconciliation framework with reductions that would be much smaller. But many GOP leaders and conservative think tanks still want to rein in the program. Conservatives don’t love Medicaid. Their philosophy is that it is a handout. In their minds, healthcare is a commodity — something you budget for and earn over time as your income climbs. If they were to cover someone’s illness, it is done behind the scenes (through Medicaid slush funds to powerful hospitals in big

Read More »

Available Now

$30.00