Republican leaders have promised to cut spending by targeting waste, fraud and abuse in Medicaid while sparing beneficiaries, but experts differ on whether they can come anywhere near their goals without harming providers and patients.
House Republicans aim to slash at least $1.5 trillion from the federal budget over 10 years to partially offset the $4.5 trillion cost of extending the tax cuts that President Donald Trump enacted in his first term, which are due to sunset this year. The bulk of that would likely come from Medicaid under the budget resolution the majority GOP House approved on a party-line last month.
Related: Dems run ads against GOP lawmakers over Medicaid cut proposals
The budget resolution orders House committees to write legislation to carry out that plan. The Energy and Commerce Committee, which oversees Medicaid and Medicare, is instructed to cut $880 billion.
Trump and congressional GOP leaders have promised to spare Medicare, prompting Democrats to charge there is no way to find so much money without damaging the health program for low-income people, people with disabilities and older people. Tackling waste and graft simply won't produce big enough numbers, they say. In turn, Republican leaders such as House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) say there is plenty of waste, fraud and abuse to target.
This dispute is political and ideological, but it's also definitional. To beat back Democratic arguments, Republicans are adopting an expansive meaning of "waste, fraud and abuse" that depends on the contention that a large share of Medicaid beneficiaries don't actually qualify for the program — even after states spent 2023 and 2024 purging the rolls — or shouldn't be eligible because they are "able-bodied."
Improper payments
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office issued an analysis last Wednesday concluding that, to reach the $880 billion target, the Energy and Commerce Committee would have to target Medicaid or Medicare.
Excluding Medicare, Medicaid accounts for 93% of spending by programs under the committee's authority, according to the CBO. The remainder adds up to $381 billion, most of which is funded through specific fees and not availale for cuts. Just $135 billion of non-Medicaid spending would be applicable to the tax bill, according to the CBO.
“The reality is, the only way Republicans can cut at least $880 billion within the Energy and Commerce Committee’s jurisdiction is by making deep, harmful cuts to Americans’ healthcare," Energy and Commerce Committee ranking member Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) said at a news conference touting the CBO report last Wednesday.
Republicans have a clear reason to hammer home the notion that waste, fraud and abuse in Medicaid are so rampant that they can squeeze close to $1 trillion from the program without affecting providers and enrollees: The public isn't fond of Medicaid cuts.
Just 17% of Americans want Congress to reduce Medicaid funding, according to survey results the health policy research institution KFF published last Friday. Forty percent of respondents said Medicaid funding is at the right level already, while 42% want it increased. Even among self-reported Trump supporters, only 35% support Medicaid cuts, while 43% want to maintain the status quo and 22% want higher Medicaid spending, the poll found.
The waste, fraud and abuse figure that House Republicans cite is $50 billion a year, which they attribute to findings from the Government Accountability Office, a nonpartisan investigative arm of Congress. Stamp that out, and there's nearly two-thirds of the $880 billion, the argument goes.
But experts point to significant issues with that thinking.
First, the $50 billion figure comes from 2023, when Medicaid was still confronting the aftereffects of the COVID-19 pandemic, including record enrollment after Trump signed a law in 2020 allowing enrollees to keep coverage temporarily during the public health emergency even if they no longer qualified.
The estimate for improper payments in 2024 is $31 billion. Eliminating that would net much less than half the goal.