VlogResponds to House Passage of Reconciliation Bill that Cuts Medicaid, Harming Millions of People with Disabilities
WASHINGTON – The U.S. House of Representatives today passed H.R. 1, the so-called One Big, Beautiful Bill Act, that attacks civil liberties and cuts Medicaid by at least $600 billion, the largest cut in the program’s history. The reconciliation bill now moves to the Senate.
Medicaid is a lifeline for more than 70 million people, including more than 15 million people with disabilities. An estimated ten to 15 million people could lose their health insurance coverage under the bill. Medicaid pays for mental health services, treatment for opioid use disorder, and the care workers that allow our disabled and aging neighbors to live in and work in their homes and communities instead of dehumanizing institutions.
Beyond the disastrous effects on Medicaid, this pernicious bill also attacks other important civil liberties. For instance, it increases funding dramatically for an immigration detention and deportation apparatus that is denying due process and violating human rights obligations. It also restricts access to preventive health care by blocking Medicaid patients from seeking care at Planned Parenthood health centers and undermines reproductive freedom by placing a ban on coverage for abortion care in the private health insurance marketplace.
Deirdre Schifeling, ACLU's chief political and advocacy officer, had the following reaction to the bill’s passage:
“Let’s be clear: The House majority voted for a bill that takes healthcare away from millions, including people with disabilities, and blocks access to reproductive health care in order to spend $45 billion – with a B – taxpayer dollars to detain and deport millions of people – tearing apart families, imprisoning children, harming workplaces, and throwing people into foreign gulags without any evidence and in violation of our laws and constitution. This bill puts millions of people in every single state and congressional district closer to rationing medications, missing essential treatments, and unable to access the care they need when they need it or the home care workers and aides they need – who are disproportionately women of color – in order to stay healthy and safe. This is Making America Healthy Again?
“The bill asks poor and disabled Americans to pay more for medical care and imposes burdensome work requirements and bureaucratic paperwork designed to exclude people from the coverage they need. Let’s call this what it is: taking Medicaid away from sick people and low-income families in order to fund tax cuts for billionaires and turbocharge deporting immigrants who have lived, worked, and raised their families here for years.
“The Senate must do its job, represent their constituents, and reject this upside-down world bill."