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Why Do Texas Republicans Still Oppose Medicaid Expansion?

Texas State Senator Nathan Johnson | Priorities: Nathan Johnson for Texas State Senate, District 16

Senator Nathan Johnson outside Texas Capitol

State Sen. Nathan Johnson, a Democrat from Dallas, has made Medicaid expansion in Texas a priority during his first term. None of his bills has succeeded, but he's determined to break through Republican opposition if he wins another term. Credit: Jordan Vonderhaar

This story is being co-published with The Texas Tribune.

by Kim Krisberg and David Leffler

November 7, 2022

One afternoon in April 2021, state Sen. Nathan Johnson sprinted through the Texas Capitol building, determined to reach the House chamber in time to see history made. For one of the few times since the Affordable Care Act was passed in 2010, the full Texas House was going to vote on a proposal to expand Medicaid, the program that provides health care to America’s poorest.An ongoing series on the 11 states that refuse to expand Medicaid. Read other project stories.Eighteen percent of Texans don’t have health insurance—the highest rate in the nation—and Johnson had already filed five pieces of legislation that session to use Medicaid expansion to get as many as 1.2 million of those people insured.To him, the approach made sense. The federal government would pick up 90% of the cost. Research showed that by rejecting Medicaid expansion, Texas was turning its back on more than $5 billion in federal money every year.All of Johnson’s bills were likely dead that session, doomed by opposition from Republicans whose hostility toward the Affordable Care Act goes back to 2013, when then-Gov. Rick Perry called it a “criminal act.” But as he ran to the House chamber that day, Johnson clung to a faint hope that this new effort would succeed. Nine Republicans had recently signed onto a House version of his last expansion bill, suggesting that cracks were forming in the GOP front.If Republicans were looking for a way to expand Medicaid on their own terms, this bare-bones amendment to a House budget bill could be it.

Read more at

Public Health Watch

We recommend in the race for Texas Senate District 16

We recommend in the race for Texas Senate District 16

State Sen. Nathan Johnson is an independent thinker. He doesn’t parrot the party line, and he answers questions with data-driven specificity, which is why he has been a successful legislator and one that voters should return to Austin this fall.

Medicaid expansion remains unlikely in Texas

12 states, including Texas, have not adopted Medicaid coverage expansion | Priorities: Nathan Johnson for Texas State Senate, District 16

By Nicole Cobler and Asher Price | Axios

Texas lawmakers remainunlikely to expand Medicaid anytime soon, despite other red states showing new openness to the idea.

Driving the news: In the decade-plus since the landmark Affordable Care Act was enacted, 12 states with GOP-led legislatures still have not expanded Medicaid coverage to people living below 138% of the poverty line (or nearly $19,000 annually for one person in 2022).

  • But there's evidence that the political winds are changing in holdout states as leaders court rural voters, assess new financial incentives and confront the bipartisan popularity of extending health care coverage.

  • In Texas, the state with the highest percentage of uninsured residents per capita, some Republicans have co-sponsored Medicaid expansion bills. That indicates "cracks" in Republican opposition, Luis Figueroa, legislative and policy director at progressive think tank Every Texan, told Axios.

Yes, but: Proposals to expand Medicaid did not even get a committee hearing in 2021 — let alone a vote on the Texas House or Senate floor.

  • What they're saying: Based on the history of the state's Republican leadership, there's no reason to think 2023 — the next time the legislature convenes in Austin — will be any different from 2021, David Balat, a former hospital administrator who now runs the health care initiative at the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation, tells Axios.

State Sen. Nathan Johnson, a Dallas Democrat who has led the push for Medicaid expansion, said he doesn't expect to see it pass this session, but noted he was optimistic about last session's shift, where it became "a subject at the forefront of the state."

  • "I think a lot of Republican members would like to extend Medicaid even more than they will say it," Johnson added.

Bucking expansion, Texas Republicans have tried their own approach to improve health care in the state.

  • House Speaker Dade Phelan last session pushed a slew of health care measures on telehealth, drug savings and expanding Medicaid coverage for new mothers.

  • Phelan told Axios he would "prioritize improvements to health coverage," but did not indicate that he would support Medicaid expansion. Instead, he said he would push for Medicaid expansion for new mothers to one year after birth, which the Senate watered down to six months before its passage in 2021.

  • Federal regulators are expected to reject the plan to extend Medicaid for new mothers over its eligibility restrictions, which leave out women who terminate their pregnancies, even in medical emergencies, the Dallas Morning News reported.

Between the lines: To fill in some of those gaps, the Texas Hospital Association plans to lobby for measures to further expand postpartum Medicaid, in-patient behavioral health care and ensure that eligible Texans aren't removed from Medicaid rolls next session.

  • "We will continue to strongly advocate for Medicaid expansion," said Jennifer Banda, senior vice president of advocacy and public policy for the group. "At the same time, these are also things we can do that will continue to move us forward in terms of people having the best possible access to care."

Short of an outcry over health care issues and enough electoral surprises in gerrymandered Texas House races in November to put the scare into Texas Republicans, overcoming the opposition of the top GOP leadership will be "big obstacles to overcome," Figueroa says.

  • And if there are surprises: "When you're a legislator and these races did not come out the way you wanted them to come out, a vote for Medicaid expansion helps put you a little towards the middle without any real harm, so that you're not as vulnerable as next time around," he says. "Medicaid expansion is a pretty easy one, because it's revenue-supported, it's popular and it helps rural hospitals."

What we're watching: The midterm elections. In the unlikely scenario that both Beto O'Rouke beats Gov. Greg Abbott and Mike Collier unseats Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick — both sitting Republicans are opposed to Medicaid expansion — the whole ballgame changes.

The future of Medicaid expansion in other red states