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Three-quarters of Americans oppose Medicaid cuts, poll shows

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georgiarecorder.com – Jennifer Shutt – 2025-05-01 06:53:00

by Jennifer Shutt, Georgia Recorder
May 1, 2025

WASHINGTON — A majority of Americans, including most Republicans, oppose major cuts in federal funding for Medicaid, according to a poll released Thursday by the nonpartisan health research organization KFF.

The survey shows that 76% of those questioned wouldn’t support  Congress slashing the amount of spending dedicated to the state-federal health program for lower-income Americans and some people with disabilities.

Democrats held the highest rate of opposition at 95%. A small majority of Republicans surveyed, 55%, said they don’t support substantial federal spending cuts for the program.

The breakdown was nearly even among respondents who identified as Make America Great Again supporters — President Donald Trump’s base — with 51% of that group saying they support less federal funding for Medicaid and 49% saying they oppose major cuts to the federal allocation.

The survey comes just days before House Republicans are expected to release a bill that will likely propose cutting hundreds of billions in federal funding for Medicaid.

That legislation, as well as bills from several other committees, is supposed to help Republicans offset some of the $4.5 trillion deficit impact that comes with extending the 2017 tax law.

The KFF poll also showed strong opposition to slashing federal funding to other health care programs — 74% were against cuts to states for mental health and addiction prevention services, 71% didn’t support reducing federal spending to track infectious disease outbreaks, 69% opposed limiting federal dollars for research at universities and medical centers, 65% were against cuts to HIV prevention program allocations and 65% didn’t support reducing federal funding to help people buy health insurance through the Affordable Care Act.

Polling of 1,380 U.S. adults took place from April 8 to April 15 via telephone and online. The margin of error is plus or minus 3 percentage points.

Senate GOP watching House action

Senate Republicans are closely watching how their House colleagues restructure federal funding for Medicaid, and will likely propose changes when the entire 11-bill package comes over from the House later this year.

Several GOP senators told reporters at the Capitol on Wednesday they will judge the package based on how changes to Medicaid will impact their constituents.

Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley said he’s unlikely to support any changes to Medicaid that “will result in cutting benefits or denying eligibility for people who are otherwise working.”

U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley, Republican of Missouri, at the U.S. Capitol on Nov. 20, 2024. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

“I’m all for work requirements,” he said. “I don’t think you get any Republican objection to that.”

But Hawley said going beyond that might be pressing the issue too far to get his vote.

“I just met with the governor of my state this morning. He’s in town. We just sat down and we talked about this issue,” Hawley said, adding that Gov. Mike Kehoe, a Republican, was “very worried about” potential changes to federal Medicaid funding.

Maine Sen. Susan Collins said she’s planning to evaluate the House bill once it makes it through that chamber based on “the impact on low-income seniors who are dual eligible, families with children with disabilities, low-income families, our rural hospitals, healthcare providers.”

Dual eligibility refers to people who are on Medicare and Medicaid.

“I am open to carefully crafted work requirements for able-bodied adults who do not have preschool children,” Collins said. “But I have no idea what the package is going to contain at this point.”

Kansas Sen. Jerry Moran said he’s told his chamber’s Republican leadership that “Medicaid is an important issue” for him in determining whether he votes for the entire package once it’s on the floor.

“I’m going to look at overall how it impacts citizens, particularly people with disabilities, and how it impacts my state and the hospitals that provide services to people in Kansas,” Moran said.

North Dakota Sen. John Hoeven said “the challenge is going to be to find savings in line with what the president has described.”

“He said he doesn’t want any cuts to Medicaid,” Hoeven said. “But how do you make sure that you eliminate waste, fraud and abuse? And that the folks that should be getting it are getting it, rather than an able-bodied person who should be out there working and is able to do that and take care of themselves.”

Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor John McCosh for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.

The post Three-quarters of Americans oppose Medicaid cuts, poll shows appeared first on georgiarecorder.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

This article presents information on public opposition to cuts in Medicaid funding, highlighting strong support among Democrats and a notable portion of Republicans against major reductions. It frames Medicaid as essential for low-income Americans and people with disabilities, emphasizing concerns about the potential negative impacts of proposed GOP cuts. The inclusion of critical perspectives from GOP senators who express reservations about harsh cuts suggests a balanced, yet somewhat sympathetic stance toward preserving Medicaid funding and protecting vulnerable populations, aligning with a Center-Left viewpoint.

News from the South - Georgia News Feed

Trump to announce US will call the Persian Gulf the Arabian Gulf: Officals

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www.wsav.com – The Associated Press – 2025-05-07 06:37:00

SUMMARY: President Donald Trump plans to announce during his Saudi Arabia trip that the U.S. will officially call the Persian Gulf the “Arabian Gulf” or “Gulf of Arabia,” aligning with Arab nations’ preferences but opposing Iran’s historic naming. The Persian Gulf, known by this name since the 16th century, is a sensitive issue in the region. Iran strongly condemns the renaming as hostile and symbolic of political tensions, asserting it reflects shared regional heritage. While Trump can change U.S. usage, global naming conventions remain unaffected. The move ties to Trump’s efforts to strengthen ties with Gulf countries for financial and geopolitical reasons.

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Georgia Dems consider shifting focus from culture war issues at center-left summit

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georgiarecorder.com – Ross Williams – 2025-05-07 02:00:00

by Ross Williams, Georgia Recorder
May 7, 2025

How should Georgia Democrats deal with sensitive topics like transgender rights and diversity, equity and inclusion?

Georgia Democrats are thinking about the path forward as they look ahead to the 2026 midterms, hoping that discontent with President Donald Trump and his fellow Republicans will help propel Sen. Jon Ossoff back to Washington and launch a Democrat into the governor’s office for the first time since Roy Barnes served more than 20 years ago.

Other top executive offices like lieutenant governor, attorney general and secretary of state will also be up for grabs, as will 236 seats up and down the state Legislature.

A handful of Georgia Democratic leaders, including at least one candidate for governor, talked strategy Monday and Tuesday at the 2025 NewDEAL Ideas Summit in Atlanta, a conference for center-left Democrats at the state and local level from around the country.

Jim Kessler. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder

On Tuesday, Atlanta Democratic Sen. Jason Esteves introduced Jim Kessler, executive vice president for policy at Third Way, a center-left think tank, for a presentation called “How Democrats Lost the Middle.”

“It’s weird, people really hate Donald Trump, but they really don’t like us either,” Esteves said. “So we need to figure out how to tread that line and make sure that people understand what we’re about, and how we can rebuild a durable Democratic (coalition). And Jim Kessler can do that.”

“How Democrats Lost the Middle”

Kessler started his presentation with statistics on the results from November’s presidential race, highlighting concerning trends for Democrats. Kessler said that of the 50 states plus Washington D.C., former Vice President Kamala Harris won 18 of the top 20 states with the highest per capita percentage of college degree holders, but lost in all but two of the bottom 31.

And while Democrats did well with white, college educated voters, they lost ground among voters of other ethnicities, particularly those without college degrees, making it more difficult to build a winning coalition in swing states like Georgia.

Kessler concluded with four key takeaways: “white and woke doesn’t win,” Latinos are beginning to vote more like white people, listen to voters and prioritize their desires over less immediate issues like mitigating climate change or preserving democratic norms and to mind the marriage gap – Harris lost married voters by 13 points, a wider gap than the gender gap, he said.

“The lesson here is we talk about kitchen table economics all the time, how families can balance the budgets and make ends meet, but there’s other subjects that are brought up at the kitchen table, too, that are family issues that I think Democrats have been absent on a lot of these cultural issues, but we have to be part of the solution of those kitchen table discussions as well.”

Rep. Tanya Miller. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder

Tanya Miller, an Atlanta Democrat and House minority caucus chair, asked Kessler what those kitchen table issues were.

“I think they tend to be cultural issues,” he said. “I think there are things that people are talking about that they’re afraid to say publicly because they feel that they might get shouted at. I definitely think the trans issue is one of those in which people say, like, I feel like if I say the wrong word, I say the wrong pronoun. I’m walking on eggshells, and I think people are talking about stuff like that around the table.”

Kessler gave the example of the “Kamala is for they/them” ad run by now-President Donald Trump featuring a clip from a 2019 video in which Harris said she supported taxpayer-funded gender affirming surgery for inmates.

“If I had one piece of advice for Democrats, just one, it would be stop talking to the groups,” he said, referring to interest groups. “Stop answering the questionnaires, tear them up, and talk to people, and not the groups out there.”

Georgia Democrats react

Near the end of this year’s session, most House Democrats staged a walkout to protest the Republican emphasis on bills taking rights from transgender Georgians. The walkout took place during a vote on a ban for gender-affirming care for people locked up in state detention centers.

Democrats called the bill a ploy for votes at the expense of a marginalized group, argued that fewer than ten incarcerated people had even requested gender-affirming care and said denying medical treatment to incarcerated people could violate constitutional protections against cruel and unusual punishment.

House Minority Leader Carolyn Hugley of Columbus characterized the bill as part of a Republican fixation on a small population of transgender Georgians and a waste of time. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder

When asked whether things like that walkout harm Democrats, Esteves, who was marked excused during the Senate vote on the prison gender care ban, indicated the party should emphasize other issues.

“I think Democrats should be focused on solving the issues that the state faces right now,” he said. “And we have a big affordability crisis. So we should be focused on keeping and bringing money into peoples’ pockets.”

Miller, who kicked off the House walkout with a speech criticizing the GOP focus on transgender issues, said Democrats have to walk a fine balance.

“The solution is not to ignore transgender issues,” she said. “Transgender people have the absolute human right to live, to live freely, to be who they are, to get the health care that they deserve, just like every Georgian, every Georgian has the right to do the exact same thing.

“At the same time, we have to stop playing – it’s a sort of a political dance,” she added. “We have to stop letting Republicans drag us into spaces and places where we can’t get our way out. And there is a pragmatism to this thing called politics, we’ve got to win the elections. Because if we’re sitting on the sideline as losers with no power, no ability to effect policy, no ability to protect the Georgians that we want to protect, then we’re just sitting at home alone, watching everything get destroyed.”

Atlanta Democratic Sen. Elena Parent, one of four Democrats who voted in favor of the trans inmate care ban, said the problem Democrats face is the perception that they care more about issues distant to a majority of people.

“You have to understand what their concerns are and then you can’t have them think that you’re more worried about some of these hot button issues and we’ll go to the mat on those and don’t really care about what’s really impacting the vast majority of people’s lives every single day.”

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Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor John McCosh for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.

The post Georgia Dems consider shifting focus from culture war issues at center-left summit appeared first on georgiarecorder.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

The content reflects a center-left political bias by focusing on the Democratic Party’s strategies and challenges, particularly those of Georgia Democrats. It discusses efforts by moderate and progressive Democrats to navigate sensitive cultural and economic issues, highlighting a pragmatic approach towards appealing to a broader voter base. The inclusion of speakers from a center-left think tank and the emphasis on balancing social justice issues with economic concerns further support a center-left leaning perspective.

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Officials speak out about chemical spill traffic accident in Aiken County

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www.wjbf.com – Isabella Moody – 2025-05-06 21:53:00

SUMMARY: On Tuesday afternoon, a tractor-trailer carrying highly flammable methyl acetate went over a bridge on I-20 at Highway 1 in Aiken County, South Carolina. The driver was trapped and had to be cut out, then transported to the hospital. Witnesses helped evacuate nearby people, fearing an explosion due to fluid leaking from the truck. Emergency teams, including fire, hazmat, and emergency management, responded to control the leak and are awaiting a specialized company to offload the hazardous material. Interstate 20 and surrounding roads are closed with detours in place for 10-12 hours. A shelter-in-place order was issued within a one-mile radius.

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