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Mar 31 2019
News
Trump's bid to kill Obamacare moves to courts: 'The clock is going to run out'
After losing in Congress, President Donald Trump is counting on the courts to kill off “Obamacare.” But some cases are going against him, and time is not on his side as he tries to score a big win for his re-election campaign.
Two federal judges in Washington, D.C., this past week blocked parts of Trump’s health care agenda: work requirements for some low-income people on Medicaid, and
Washington TimesNov 28 2015
News
Health Co-Ops Established Under Obamacare Already Failing
Nearly half of the government-backed, nonprofit co-op health plans set up under Obamacare have already closed or are expected to close by years end, and the future of others remains in jeopardy going into 2016.
"Things change," Kevin Counihan, insurance marketplace CEO for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, told Fox News, http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2015/11/28/fate-
Newsmax (News)Jan 02 2014
News
ObamaCare: Coverage killer
ObamaCare seems to have been an insurance killer so far. More than 5 million policies were nixed under the law’s new regulations. Announcing that just over 2 million people are potential paying customers is a rather stunning admission of defeat. Some of the millions may have landed on employer-based insurance and others may have become eligible under the expanded Medicaid program, but there
Fox News DigitalSep 27 2012
News
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010: An Overview of the New Health Care Law
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act includes: 1) Creation of a new insurance marketplace, resulting in expanding access to coverage and the formation of statebased Exchanges 2) Sweeping insurance market reforms 3) Fundamental changes to Medicare, expansion of the Medicaid Program, and reforms to Part D, closing the “Donut Hole by 2020 4) Fraud and abuse, health IT, and prevention
United Health GroupApr 15 2015
News
New poll suggests Utah legislators made the grade in 2015 session
Most Utahns give lawmakers a passing grade for their work at the Capitol this year.
No surprise the highest marks come from republicans, but independents aren't so generous.
Some big issues were on the table during the 2015 Legislative Session.
Medicaid expansion, LGBT nondiscrimination, religious freedom, criminal justice reform and funding for education and
ABC4 UtahMar 23 2015
News
A guide to the big differences between Congress' and Obama's 2016 budget proposals
Budget season is upon us, that magical time of year in which the parties announce bold visions of the future of the American experiment and/or mild adjustments to the near-term trajectory of federal outlays and revenues. The White House and the Republican-controlled Senate and House Budget Committees have unveiled their spending plans, meaning all three major players are on the record.
VoxApr 10 2019
News
Bernie Sanders’ new Medicare for All bill would cover some long-term care
Sen. Bernie Sanders on Wednesday released an updated bill to implement a single-payer health insurance system, a politically divisive hallmark of his White House bid.
The unnumbered Senate bill would transition the U.S. health care system to a single-payer system over a four-year transition and eliminate nearly all premiums, co-pays and deductibles. The legislation largely mirrors
Roll CallMar 09 2021
News
Pandemic Relief Bill Fulfills Biden’s Promise to Expand Obamacare, for Two Years
President Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill will fulfill one of his central campaign promises, to fill the holes in the Affordable Care Act and make health insurance affordable for more than a million middle-class Americans who could not afford insurance under the original law.
The bill, which will most likely go to the House for a final vote on Wednesday, includes a
New York Times (News)Sep 02 2015
News
Report: Immigrant Households Using Welfare at Vastly Higher Rate than Native-Born Households
Immigrant-headed households in the U.S. use welfare at a much higher rate than their native-born counterparts and that trend holds true for both new and long-time immigrant residents, according to a new study.
According to a report released Wednesday from the Center for Immigration Studies, 51 percent of immigrant-headed households (both legal and illegal) reported using at least one
Breitbart NewsFeb 22 2021
News
House conservatives unveil playbook on how they’ll fight back against Democrats' $1.9T COVID bill
The largest conservative caucus in the House is circulating a new playbook on how to fight back against President Biden's $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill by exposing each of the ''liberal goodies" tucked inside the package.
The Republican Study Committee (RSC) authored a three-page memo to conservatives to outline "all the left-wing items Democrats are hoping the public won’t
Fox News Digital