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Medicaid Expansion Backers In Kansas May Hold Budget Hostage

Stephen Koranda
/
KPR/File photo

Supporters of expanding Medicaid in Kansas are looking to block passage of the state's next annual budget to force an expansion plan through the Republican-controlled Legislature over conservative leaders' objections.

Legislators reconvened Wednesday after an annual spring break, and the state Senate expected to vote quickly on expediting an expansion debate. The Senate has yet to act on a measure approved by the House in March, and top Republicans want to delay action until next year.

The next Senate vote would be on pulling an expansion bill out of the committee where it's been stuck for weeks, and supporters are not sure of success. Their doubts have them focusing on the alternative of tying up the $18 billion-plus budget that lawmakers must pass to keep state government operating after June.

"It's the best leverage we have right now," said House Minority Leader Tom Sawyer, a Wichita Democrat. "There's been a lot of discussion."

Medicaid expansion is one of new Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly's priorities and its approval would be her biggest victory so far in her first months in office. Expansion has enjoyed bipartisan support for at least several years, but Kelly's conservative Republican predecessors were vocal critics of the 2010 federal Affordable Care Act that encouraged it.

During an Associated Press interview, Kelly brushed aside top Republicans' concerns about needing more time to consider the details of an expansion as "just a stall tactic."

"I don't really believe that they can come up with a better product, given a year," she said. "I think they are really not that interested in expanding Medicaid. They never have been, but I think they're starting to recognize the inevitability of it."

Top Republicans argue that Kelly is trying to rush the debate and that they want to avoid pitfalls that could drive up the state's costs.

"It needs a lot of due diligence and structure to protect the patients as well as the taxpayers," said Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning, a conservative Kansas City-area Republican.

Kelly's plan for expanding Medicaid health coverage to up to 150,000 additional Kansas residents is based on a bill that passed in 2017 with bipartisan support, only to be vetoed by then-Gov. Sam Brownback, a Republican.

Denning called the House-passed expansion bill "regurgitated" and said the state needs policies in place to curb health costs and encourage Medicaid participants to seek preventative care. GOP lawmakers also have mentioned imposing work requirements and even drug testing.

Denning said he agrees with Kelly that expansion "is inevitable" but added, "She's going to have to wait, I hope, until the second year so we can do the massive and complicated plan correctly, rather than in a rush."

The Affordable Care Act was Democratic former President Barack Obama's signature domestic policy and it encouraged states to expand Medicaid by promising that the federal government would cover most of the cost. Thirty-six states have expanded Medicaid or seen voters approve ballot initiatives.

Kelly's administration has projected that the first full year of Kansas' expansion would come with a net cost of $34 million to the state. Some supporters believe the influx of federal dollars will spur economic activity, generate new state tax revenues and offset those costs. Many Republicans are skeptical and believe the state's next costs could be much higher.

The Senate's top Democrat, Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, of Topeka, notified colleagues the he would try to pull the expansion bill from committee. Under Senate rules, he needed 24 of 40 votes to do so. Supporters then needed 27 of 40 votes to put the bill at the top of the debate calendar against GOP leaders' wishes.

Democrats hold only 11 seats in the Senate and must rely on Republicans to bypass the normal committee process. It could be a tough sell to some moderate GOP senators who lead committees themselves and don't want to face a similar tactic in the future.

Blocking the budget is "all we have left," said Rep. Susan Concannon, a moderate Republican and expansion supporter from western Kansas.

"If we support Medicaid expansion, that's our leverage," she said.

The Associated Press is one of the largest and most trusted sources of independent newsgathering, supplying a steady stream of news to its members, international subscribers and commercial customers. AP is neither privately owned nor government-funded; instead, it's a not-for-profit news cooperative owned by its American newspaper and broadcast members.