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Friday, April 19, 2024

Biden to Extend Medicaid, Obamacare to Hundreds of Thousands of Illegals

Granting longtime illegals a 'lawful presence' in U.S. will effectively create a back-door amnesty without legislative approval, even as DACA remains fraught with legal challenges...

(Headline USA President Joe Biden is set to announce that his administration is expanding eligibility for Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance exchanges to hundreds of thousands of immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally as children, according to two U.S. officials briefed on the matter.

The action will allow participants in the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, to access government-funded health insurance programs even as members of Congress warn of the need to rein-in federal entitlement programs, which run the risk of depletion before taxpaying citizens are able to access the benefits that they have vested in them.

The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the matter before the formal announcement on Thursday.

Obama’s 2012 DACA fiat—which later was ruled by courts to have overstepped his constitutional authority by failing to enforce existing immigration laws—was the first sign that Democrats were shifting radically toward an open-border policy that has come into full fruition during the Biden presidency, with at least 5 million illegals having flooded into the U.S.

However, the illegal immigrants protected under DACA were still ineligible for government-subsidized health insurance programs because they did not meet the definition for having “lawful presence” in the U.S. That’s what Biden’s Department of Health and Human Services will aim to change by the end of the month, effectively creating a back-door pathway to amnesty without legislative approval.

The White House action comes as the DACA program is in legal peril and the number of people eligible under the program is shrinking.

An estimated 580,000 people were still enrolled in DACA at the end of last year, according to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. That number is down from previous years.

Court orders currently prevent the U.S. Department of Homeland Security from processing new applications. The DACA program has been mired in legal challenges for years, while Congress has been unable to reach consensus on broader immigration reforms.

DACA recipients can work legally and pay taxes, but they don’t have legal status and are denied many benefits available to U.S. citizens and foreigners living in the U.S.

In recent years, millions of people in the U.S. signed up for Medicaid, the program that provides health care coverage for the poorest Americans, during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The government increased federal subsidies to drive down the cost of plans on the Affordable Care Act’s marketplace. As of last year, just 8% of Americans were without health insurance, according to HHS.

But DACA recipients, as well as those in the country without documentation, are barred from joining those federally funded programs. About half of the roughly 20 million immigrants who are living in the U.S. without documentation are uninsured, according to research from the left-wing Kaiser Family Foundation.

While there’s bipartisan support to enact some sort of protections for the immigrants, negotiations have often broken down over debates about border security and whether an expansion of protections might induce others to try to enter the U.S. without permission.

Biden, a Democrat, has repeatedly called on Congress to provide a pathway to citizenship for immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally as children.

Other classes of immigrants—including asylum seekers and people with temporary protected status — are already eligible to purchase insurance through the marketplaces of the ACA, former President Barack Obama’s 2010 health care law, often called “Obamacare.”

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press

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