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Voters in South Dakota to decide on Medicaid expansion to low-income residents in midterms

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Voters in South Dakota to decide on Medicaid expansion to low-income residents in midterms

South Dakota voters on Tuesday are weighing whether or not to broaden Medicaid medical insurance to tens of 1000’s of low-income residents via a constitutional modification.

If Constitutional Modification D is accredited by a majority vote, it could take away South Dakota from a listing of 12 states that haven’t expanded eligibility for the federal government medical insurance program to folks incomes as much as 138% of the federal poverty stage — at present about $18,800 for a person or $38,300 for a household of 4.

The Republican-controlled Legislature has declined to broaden Medicaid eligibility below the 2010 federal Reasonably priced Care Act, and Gov. Kristi Noem has opposed the concept. However proponents for growth have discovered success via poll measures throughout GOP-dominated states, and a large coalition of well being care teams and organizations backed a well-funded poll marketing campaign this 12 months in South Dakota.

“We’re a farm group, and other people simply can’t afford insurance coverage so that they want some extra assist,” stated Bob Pederson, a Sioux Falls retiree who voted to broaden eligibility Tuesday.

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Dave Melemseter, additionally voting in Sioux Falls, stated he backed growth though he fearful it could weigh closely on the state funds. Melemseter — who like Pederson stated he often votes Republican — stated it was vital for folks to have protection.

“I believe it can go and I believe six years down the street, we’re going to be caught with a very huge invoice,” he stated.

As soon as a proposition that was anathema to conservatives, its passage could be an indication of rising acceptance even in a deeply pink state.

By amending the state Structure, voters would additionally place Medicaid growth exterior the grasp of the Legislature. Roughly 40,000 folks would grow to be eligible for Medicaid.

A coalition of well being care teams, together with the state’s largest hospital techniques, initiated the poll marketing campaign. It has additionally received help from organizations that vary throughout the political spectrum, from the state Chamber of Commerce to the South Dakota Farmers Union, non secular organizations and progressive teams.

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South Dakota voters will resolve whether or not to broaden Medicaid medical insurance to low-income people on this 12 months’s midterm elections.

Advocates for growth say that Medicaid entry would assist low-income individuals who might be saddled with exorbitant hospital payments, whereas additionally permitting the state’s residents to faucet into over $1 billion in federal funds.

NOEM, SMITH HEADLINE SOUTH DAKOTA ELECTIONS, WHILE REPUBLICANS THUNE, JOHNSON EXPECTED TO RETURN TO CONGRESS

They’ve run adverts that characteristic working-class folks like farmers and hairstylists speaking about their want for well being care protection.

The marketing campaign has branded the modification as a monetary “deal” for South Dakota. The federal authorities pays 90% of prices below a 2021 federal COVID-19 reduction bundle, so the state would obtain $1.3 billion in federal funding over 5 years for growth. The state’s share over that point could be $166.2 million, however would additionally end in $162.5 million in financial savings, in response to the Legislature’s analysis division.

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However some Republican lawmakers have argued that the constitutional modification would create a legal responsibility in South Dakota’s small state funds.

Teams like American for Prosperity, a free-market lobbying group, additionally argue that Medicaid is a wasteful program and discourages folks from looking for jobs the place they will get non-public insurance coverage.

A GUIDE TO THE FOX NEWS 2022 ELECTIONS EXPERIENCE

In an effort to go off the Medicaid growth vote, Republican lawmakers had proposed a separate constitutional modification on this 12 months’s main election that will have required a 60% vote threshold on poll measures that elevate taxes or spend vital authorities funds. That proposal was overwhelmingly rejected by voters.

Noem, who’s prone to win the governor’s put up once more, has stated she will not be in favor of increasing Medicaid however dedicated to implementing it if it passes.

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Video: Biden Pokes Fun at Trump During Annual Roast

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Video: Biden Pokes Fun at Trump During Annual Roast

new video loaded: Biden Pokes Fun at Trump During Annual Roast

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Biden Pokes Fun at Trump During Annual Roast

President Biden joked about former President Donald J. Trump’s age — and his own — among other topics at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner. Outside the event, outrage over Mr. Biden’s support for Israel in the war in Gaza was evident.

“The 2024 election is in full swing. And yes, age is an issue. I’m a grown man running against a 6-year-old. Age is the only thing we have in common. My vice president actually endorses me. [laughter] I had a great stretch since the State of the Union, but Donald has had a few tough days lately. You might call it stormy weather.” “I hope that tonight will be a night to remember, for most of us. And I would like to point out — it’s after 10 p.m., sleepy Joe is still awake. My Weekend Update co-anchor, Michael Che was going to join me here tonight. But in solidarity with President Biden, I decided to lose all my black support. Che told me to say that, and I’m just realizing I was set up.” “Shame, shame, shame on you.” “Shame on you!” “Shame, shame, shame, shame.”

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Fetterman blasts ‘germ of antisemitism’ in college protests, ‘living in a pup tent for Hamas’ not helpful

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Fetterman blasts ‘germ of antisemitism’ in college protests, ‘living in a pup tent for Hamas’ not helpful

Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., in a new interview, blasted the “germ of antisemitism” seen in anti-Israel protests unfolding on American college campuses.

“It’s a great American value to protest, but I don’t believe living in a pup tent for Hamas is really helpful,” Fetterman said on NewsNation’s “The Hill Sunday.”

“I want to be clear, there is a germ of antisemitism in these protests, and sometimes it flares up. And again, including one of the leaders in Columbia who said some just awful things, talking about ‘Well, they’re lucky we’re not killing Zionists’ and things like that, and he defends himself by saying, ‘Well, those were taken out of context.’” 

“And I’m like, that’s very similar to the way the college presidents, the same kind of language, and those kind of monocultures that create situations and that replicates. And now it’s not a surprise when you’re kind of seeing this manifest itself in a campus like this,” Fetterman said. 

FETTERMAN HAMMERS ‘A–HOLE’ ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTERS, SLAMS OWN PARTY FOR RESPONSE TO IRANIAN ATTACK: ‘CRAZY’

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Sen. John Fetterman walks to the Senate chamber at the U.S. Capitol on April 23, 2024. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

The senator seemed to be referencing Khymani James, a Columbia protest leader who went viral online for suggesting the murder of Zionists, whom he likened to “White supremacists” and “Nazis.”

Fetterman reiterated support for Israel’s right to defend itself as a nation, going further to say the Jewish state also has the right “to go after and eliminate Hamas, or at least force them to surrender.” 

Anti-Israel encampment at Columbia

An anti-Israel encampment at Columbia University persists for the second week on April 27, 2024, at the Ivy League school’s New York City campus. (Selcuk Acar/Anadolu via Getty Images)

“I’m confused why we’re not talking about that more,” the Pennsylvania Democrat said. “And if you are going to protest, why aren’t we protesting… I can’t end that war, Joe Biden can’t end that war, Netanyahu can’t end that war, but Hamas could end it right now, immediately. They could release the last hostages, and they could surrender.”

FETTERMAN HIGHLIGHTS NEED FOR ‘SAFE, PURE, TAXED’ MARIJUANA IN 4/20 PUSH TO LEGALIZE WEED

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“And all of the misery and the death and destruction ends right there, too. So, for true peace, you cannot allow Hamas to function,” he added. “It’s very reasonable to make sure that Hamas needs to be neutralized.” 

Fetterman recalled how before the primaries he said, “I support peace and I support a two-state solution, but if the stuff hits the fan, I’m going to lean in on Israel, and that’s exactly what I’ve done.”

Palestine flag at Columbia encampment

The “Gaza Solidarity Encampment” at Columbia University on April 27, 2024. (Selcuk Acar/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Since enduring a stroke, Fetterman said he’s become more empathetic, especially when it comes to people with disabilities. The senator used a speech-to-text app on a tablet sitting on the studio table to better comprehend questions during the interview. 

 

Nodding to newfound support from some Republicans, Fetterman added, “I’ve been saying that for years… I really don’t identify myself as progressive. It’s not that I’ve changed, but that that word has changed.”

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Opinion: MAGA Mike sings a chorus of 'Kumbaya' with the Democrats, but for how long?

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Opinion: MAGA Mike sings a chorus of 'Kumbaya' with the Democrats, but for how long?

No one could have predicted that the worst Congress in memory would morph into the Kumbaya Congress. Or that Mike Johnson, the accidental House speaker from Louisiana, would transform from Trump puppet to statesman.

The two developments are related, of course. Congress was able to veer from the dangerous, dead-end course that the Republican-run House had it on for the past 16 months only once Johnson very belatedly took the keys from his MAGA allies and started driving events himself. Recognizing that he had no choice but to deal with the Democratic-controlled Senate and President Biden, Johnson helped pass overdue government funding last month and, in recent days, green-lighted votes reauthorizing the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act and — finally! — approving aid to Ukraine to help it defend itself and the rest of Europe from a rapacious Russia.

So, yes, we have a functioning Congress. Enjoy it while it lasts. Because it probably won’t exist after November’s election.

Opinion Columnist

Jackie Calmes

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Jackie Calmes brings a critical eye to the national political scene. She has decades of experience covering the White House and Congress.

What we have for now is something remarkable, even historic: a coalition government in the House in which both parties are cooperating to enact crucial legislation. But a coalition government has never been the natural order of business in our two-party system, certainly not in these polarized times.

Usually when control of the White House, Senate and House is divided between the parties, Democrats and Republicans firmly exercise their respective levers of power, until one side relents or both compromise. When a House majority is united, it can run over the minority, and maximize its leverage against the Senate or White House.

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But House Republicans aren’t united; they are a majority in name only. So lately, under Johnson, they have all but forfeited key powers and in effect shared governance with Democrats, whose votes are what keep the place running. Republicans simply can’t pass critical legislation on their own.

Their paper-thin House majority is so riven — antigovernment hardliners squaring off against more moderate legislators, isolationist America Firsters versus Reaganesque internationalists — that it was dysfunctional from its start, in January 2023. It took Republicans an unprecedented 15 votes to elect a speaker, and 10 months later they ousted that leader and finally settled on the novice Johnson.

Former Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s sin in his tormentors’ view, aside from being utterly distrusted by them and Democrats alike, was to rely on Democrats’ votes to raise the nation’s debt ceiling and fund the government, averting defaults and shutdowns. Even so, McCarthy stuck with the usual divided-government playbook, compromising as little as possible with Democrats and poking them in the eye when he could, not least by opening a groundless impeachment inquiry against Biden.

Predictably, Johnson also has had to turn to Democrats for help. Yet Republican extremists, egged on by Donald Trump, are so emboldened after dumping McCarthy that they’ve become even more rebellious. Their cudgel over Johnson has been the rule that McCarthy unwisely acquiesced to in order to get the gavel: A single member can force a vote to unseat the speaker.

Here’s the crazy irony: The only way to actually sack the speaker is to rely on Democrats’ votes. Eight Republican mutineers ousted McCarthy thanks to the votes of all 208 Democrats present that October day; 210 Republicans voted to retain him.

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Got that? The nuts oppose their speaker passing bills with Democrats’ support. Yet to dump him, they need Democrats’ support.

But now Democrats, fed up with the dysfunction, are willing to disarm the extremists. They detested McCarthy, but they don’t dislike Johnson. And now that Johnson has finally let Congress approve Biden’s request for aid to a desperate Ukraine (as well as Israel, Gaza and Taiwan), Democrats are poised to provide the votes to prevent his defenestration.

No less than former Democratic Speaker Nancy Pelosi told Politico, “He was courageous. I can’t imagine that he won’t continue to be speaker.”

That Democrats would save a Republican speaker is almost inconceivable, and it’s the ultimate evidence that we’ve got a coalition government in the House.

There are other hugely significant breaks with historical practice. Traditionally, the majority tightly controls which important bills get to the floor for a vote and sets restrictive rules for debate. Majority party members learn on Day 1 that they must vote for rules, because the minority always opposes them. For more than two decades, the majority complied, but in the past year Republican rebels have killed seven of their leadership’s rules, blocking the bills and humiliating first McCarthy and then Johnson.

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Lately, to foil them, Johnson and Democrats have done one of two things, both of them previously unthinkable. Johnson has resorted to a fast-track procedure that allows a bill to pass without a rule if it can get a two-thirds vote, and Democrats provide the needed votes. (That’s how the government got funded.) Or Democrats have supported the majority’s rule, offsetting Republican defections. (That’s how the Ukraine aid bill passed.)

The upshot is that Democrats are empowered like no House minority in memory. Republicans can pass all the red-meat bills for the MAGA base they want, like punitive measures on immigration or transgender issues, but the bills will die in the Senate. However, Democrats are in control when it comes to bills that must become law, such as on annual spending and debt increases, or should become law, such as aid to Ukraine.

Only by continuing this unorthodox bipartisanship will the House be able to, for example, fund the government for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1 and avoid a pre-election shutdown. But it likely won’t persist after the election because either the more unified Democrats will win a majority, or more hard-line Republicans will be elected — and perhaps Trump, too — and the party will revert to obstructionist form.

For voters, the response should be obvious: Just elect more Democrats in November, and put them fully in charge.

@jackiekcalmes

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