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6/19/2025, 11:41:31 PM
>>508024249
That's why I have been warning against the GOP's proposed Medicaid cuts. That shit is extremely unpopular. It's not why they were elected, but they are going to do it anyway and get clobbered in 2026 and beyond, for no real reason. It's like the whole thing is a stage-managed sham.
That's why I have been warning against the GOP's proposed Medicaid cuts. That shit is extremely unpopular. It's not why they were elected, but they are going to do it anyway and get clobbered in 2026 and beyond, for no real reason. It's like the whole thing is a stage-managed sham.
6/12/2025, 11:27:58 PM
>>507129925
Deporting illegals = popular. Trump and the GOP's problem is that they are doing other unpopular things, like slashing Medicare in order to extend tax cuts for multi-billionaires and to further bloat the military budget. That's going to make them lose in 2026, at the least. Look at how unpopular Medicaid cuts actually are:
https://poll.qu.edu/poll-release?releaseid=3924
>Nearly half of voters (47 percent) think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 40 percent think it should stay about the same, and 10 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should decrease.
>Among Republicans, 21 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 56 percent think it should stay about the same, and 18 percent think it should decrease.
>Among Democrats, 69 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 27 percent think it should stay about the same, and 2 percent think it should decrease.
>Among independents, 47 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 39 percent think it should stay about the same, and 11 percent think it should decrease.
Deporting illegals = popular. Trump and the GOP's problem is that they are doing other unpopular things, like slashing Medicare in order to extend tax cuts for multi-billionaires and to further bloat the military budget. That's going to make them lose in 2026, at the least. Look at how unpopular Medicaid cuts actually are:
https://poll.qu.edu/poll-release?releaseid=3924
>Nearly half of voters (47 percent) think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 40 percent think it should stay about the same, and 10 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should decrease.
>Among Republicans, 21 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 56 percent think it should stay about the same, and 18 percent think it should decrease.
>Among Democrats, 69 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 27 percent think it should stay about the same, and 2 percent think it should decrease.
>Among independents, 47 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 39 percent think it should stay about the same, and 11 percent think it should decrease.
6/12/2025, 3:10:21 PM
It turns out that Medicaid cuts are massively unpopular:
https://poll.qu.edu/poll-release?releaseid=3924
>Nearly half of voters (47 percent) think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 40 percent think it should stay about the same, and 10 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should decrease.
>Among Republicans, 21 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 56 percent think it should stay about the same, and 18 percent think it should decrease.
>Among Democrats, 69 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 27 percent think it should stay about the same, and 2 percent think it should decrease.
>Among independents, 47 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 39 percent think it should stay about the same, and 11 percent think it should decrease.
Is the Republican budget bill going to be Trump's version of Obamacare? Ie, the GOP gets wiped out in 2026 due to the backlash?
https://poll.qu.edu/poll-release?releaseid=3924
>Nearly half of voters (47 percent) think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 40 percent think it should stay about the same, and 10 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should decrease.
>Among Republicans, 21 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 56 percent think it should stay about the same, and 18 percent think it should decrease.
>Among Democrats, 69 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 27 percent think it should stay about the same, and 2 percent think it should decrease.
>Among independents, 47 percent think federal funding for Medicaid should increase, 39 percent think it should stay about the same, and 11 percent think it should decrease.
Is the Republican budget bill going to be Trump's version of Obamacare? Ie, the GOP gets wiped out in 2026 due to the backlash?
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