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Reform Must Address Medicaid Conundrum

Health care reformers, not to mention tens of millions of other Americans who understand money does not grow on trees, are caught between the proverbial rock and a hard place.

The rock is this: President Barack Obama’s signature health care takeover law encouraged states to expand the Medicaid program. Both at the state and federal levels, that is unsustainable.

Now for the hard place: Even some members of Congress who understand the Medicaid concern say they cannot vote for reform that would even halt expansion of the program where it is now.

Somewhere around 18 million people were added to Medicaid rolls by the Obamacare law. New enrollees go on the books every day. No one — least of all lawmakers from low-income states where Medicaid clients are huge voting blocs — has the political will to alienate that many people.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is well aware of the conundrum. It is why a House of Representatives health care reform bill went nowhere. It also is why McConnell has been unable to get the votes to pass an initial reform attempt in the Senate.

McConnell wants a vote on the new Senate bill this week. But if it does not by some near-magic address the Medicaid challenge, the new and improved proposal is doomed, too.

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