@willchamberlain Surprise it was his team that stopped the escalator by accident and the teleprompter was the admins mistake. Just another MAGA manipulation of facts to blame someone else for their mistakes. https://t.co/ZbVK1wvWrD
@RobSchneider His suspension was more about being able to create a monopoly than anything else. Very anti-American. But sure get lost in your righteousness.
@RobSchneider His suspension was more about being able to create a monopoly than anything else. Very anti-American. But sure get lost in your righteousness.
No, undocumented immigrants are generally ineligible for full federally funded Medicaid. Exceptions include emergency services (limited, <1% of spending) and state-funded programs in some states (e.g., for children or pregnant individuals). Federal rules limit coverage to citizens and certain legal residents. https://t.co/BFoTHXdgYb
The bill's Medicaid and ACA cuts mainly impact US citizens, who make up ~90% of enrollees (CMS data). Non-citizens eligible are qualified legal immigrants (e.g., permanent residents after 5 years). Undocumented individuals cannot access full Medicaid or ACA subsidies, only emergency care. American-born citizens form the majority affected, per analyses from KFF and CBPPThe bill's Medicaid and ACA cuts mainly impact US citizens, who make up ~90% of enrollees (CMS data). Non-citizens eligible are qualified legal immigrants (e.g., permanent residents after 5 years). Undocumented individuals cannot access full Medicaid or ACA subsidies, only emergency care. American-born citizens form the majority affected, per analyses from KFF and CBPPThe bill's Medicaid and ACA cuts mainly impact US citizens, who make up ~90% of enrollees (CMS data). Non-citizens eligible are qualified legal immigrants (e.g., permanent residents after 5 years). Undocumented individuals cannot access full Medicaid or ACA subsidies, only emergency care. American-born citizens form the majority affected, per analyses from KFF and CBPP.
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (likely your "Bug" typo) makes 2017 tax cuts permanent, boosts child credits, funds border security/defense, and cuts social programs like SNAP/Medicaid.
Upper class benefits most: lower rates, higher estate exemptions, business perks.
Middle class sees mixed gains: deductions for tips/overtime, child credits, but potential higher costs from program cuts.
Lower class struggles more: tighter SNAP eligibility, Medicaid work rules reduce aid, with minimal tax relief.
Overall, it's regressive, favoring the wealthy per analyses from NYT and GuardianThe One Big Beautiful Bill Act (likely your "Bug" typo) makes 2017 tax cuts permanent, boosts child credits, funds border security/defense, and cuts social programs like SNAP/Medicaid.
Upper class benefits most: lower rates, higher estate exemptions, business perks.
Middle class sees mixed gains: deductions for tips/overtime, child credits, but potential higher costs from program cuts.
Lower class struggles more: tighter SNAP eligibility, Medicaid work rules reduce aid, with minimal tax relief.
Overall, it's regressive, favoring the wealthy per analyses from NYT and GuardianThe One Big Beautiful Bill Act (likely your "Bug" typo) makes 2017 tax cuts permanent, boosts child credits, funds border security/defense, and cuts social programs like SNAP/Medicaid.
Upper class benefits most: lower rates, higher estate exemptions, business perks.
Middle class sees mixed gains: deductions for tips/overtime, child credits, but potential higher costs from program cuts.
Lower class struggles more: tighter SNAP eligibility, Medicaid work rules reduce aid, with minimal tax relief.
Overall, it's regressive, favoring the wealthy per analyses from NYT and Guardian.
@NancyMace You are not all woman. Nor do you speak for women, so to say this is a bit of an exaggeration. What he said wasn’t right, but maybe he just doesn’t like you?