Medicaid, the medical coverage program for low-income Americans, finds itself at the center of a scrum between Republicans and Democrats, haggling over funding President Donald Trump’s second-term agenda.
Republicans, aiming to improve government efficiency, are pushing to rid Medicaid of the fraud and waste they say rob the program and the 72 million Americans who depend on it for medical care.
Democrats, accusing Republicans of trying to slash Medicaid funding to counterbalance tax cuts, are pushing to avoid any changes to the program.
Republicans Want to Cut Spending
The U.S. House of Representatives passed a budget blueprint on Feb. 25 outlining their plan to fund the government.The resolution directs various House committees to recommend at least $1.5 trillion in spending cuts and $4.5 billion in tax cuts over the next 1o years. It also calls for a $4 trillion increase in the nation’s debt ceiling.
Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) drew a straight line between the GOP budget proposal and potential cuts to Medicaid.
Democrats have been warning of cuts to Medicaid since before the budget blueprint was unveiled on Feb. 12.
Within days Democrats organized a messaging campaign, producing television ads accusing Republicans of trying to gut Medicaid.
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) seized on the issue as a leverage point.
“We have [Republicans] on the run in terms of health care—particularly as it relates to Medicaid,” Jeffries said on a March 5 leadership call.
“House Democrats stand on the side of Medicaid and the American people. Republicans are trying to enact the largest cut to Medicaid in American history, and we need to keep the pressure on them legislatively and in communities all across the country,” Jeffries said.
Republicans have repeatedly said they have no such intention.
A day after the budget resolution passed, a reporter asked Trump if the proposed spending cuts would include Medicare or Medicaid.
“I have said it so many times, you shouldn’t be asking me that question,” Trump said. “We’re not going to touch it.”

“Now, we are going to look for fraud,” the president added.
Trump and other Republicans have offered that statement for weeks, but Democrats aren’t buying it.
The Dilemma
To reach their spending reduction goal, Republicans tasked the House Committee on Energy and Commerce with finding $880 billion in savings over the next 10 years. The committee proposal is due March 27.Even if all of that were eliminated, the committee would still be well short of its $880 billion goal.
Is there enough fraud in Medicaid to make up the difference?
Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-N.Y.) argued for that on March 11, simultaneously accusing Democrats of misrepresenting Republican intentions.
Other Ideas
One other idea floated by some lawmakers is to lower the rate at which the federal government reimburses states for their Medicaid spending. The reimbursement ranges from 50 percent to 76.9 percent, depending on the state’s median income level and other factors.A second idea is to place a cap on the amount the federal government would pay states per enrollee.

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said the Republicans don’t want to cut the states’ Medicaid reimbursement rate or impose a per-capita cap on Medicaid payments. “We’re talking about finding efficiencies in every program, not cutting benefits for people who rightly deserve them,” Johnson said in a Feb. 26 interview on CNN.
Energy and Commerce Chairman Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.) has not yet outlined a plan for making the $880 billion in spending cuts.
The Senate is now considering the 2026 budget.
Johnson has said he hopes to have the legislation passed in the House by Easter, April 20, or by Memorial Day, May 26, at the latest.