Trump, Medicaid and bill Hawley
Digest more
Small Business Administration leader Kelly Loeffler took to a Baltimore brewery Thursday to highlight the benefits of President Donald Trump’s recently signed “big, beautiful bill.”
Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill" is now law. It will change Medicaid work requirements and limit federal funding for healthcare and hospitals.
The bill, ushered through Congress by Republican leadership and signed by Trump Friday, includes $4.5 trillion in tax cuts, slashes spending on Medicaid, and creates temporary tax deductions for overtime and tipped income. It includes $170 billion for immigrant detention and for new personnel for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Massachusetts is preparing for a massive outreach effort to help hundreds of thousands of residents who qualify for Medicaid keep their coverage in the wake of new requirements signed into law Friday by President Trump.
Corewell Health employees received a memo this week warning them to prepare for impacts not only to patients, but also employees, due to Trump's spending bill.
The bill will stress a major funding stream schools rely on, leading to ripple effects that make it harder for schools to offer free meals.
2don MSN
A version of this article first appeared in CNBC's Healthy Returns newsletter, which brings the latest health-care news straight to your inbox. Subscribe here to receive future editions.We're back from the holiday weekend with President Donald Trump's "big beautiful" bill officially signed into law.
After Trump signed the "big, beautiful bill" into law, several leaders pointed out how it will impact Medicaid coverage and SNAP benefits in Delaware.
Vice President JD Vance is hitting the road on Wednesday to tout President Donald Trump’s agenda bill in the key battleground state of Pennsylvania, according to an official in Vance’s office.