CMS must ban self-attestation for medical frailty and block states from outsourcing exemption decisions to MCOs.
Otherwise, millions of able-bodied adults stay on Medicaid indefinitely — by design.
Full paper from @TheFGA. ⤵️ https://t.co/5WSMwaQDVz
Florida has rightly resisted Medicaid expansion.
But in most other states, able-bodied adults on the program have skyrocketed.
By how much? 7 million in 2000. 34 million today.
Thankfully, work requirements are on the way, and @CMSGov can keep blue states from stalling. 🧵
When Arkansas briefly ran Medicaid work requirements in 2018, 18,000 people raised their incomes enough to leave the program entirely.
That's the goal. Not trapping people in dependency — helping them advance.
Blue states want to make sure that never happens.
19 states have now banned ranked-choice voting.
Florida was one of the first.
In 2022, Gov. DeSantis signed SB 524 and shut the door on this confusing, ballot-trashing scheme before it could take root here.
And the movement to end RCV is just getting started. 🧵
In 2024, RCV proponents outspent opponents 20 to 1 — and still lost ballot initiatives in five states.
The Left can buy ads. It can't buy voters' common sense.
One person. One vote. The candidate with the most votes wins. Florida knew that in 2022.
President Trump's HUD, under Secretary Scott Turner, published a rule in February requiring eligibility verification for every applicant and tenant — the first time the law Congress passed in 1996 will actually be enforced.
Florida families on waitlists deserve nothing less.
Florida knows what it looks like when government gets out of the way.
The rest of the country deserves the same—but one president's deregulatory wins can be erased the moment the next one takes office.
Only Congress can make it permanent. 🧵
Florida didn't build one of the strongest economies in America by letting bureaucrats run the show.
Congress should require its own approval before major federal regulations take effect—locking in the gains for every state, not just the ones with good governors.