Cameron says that if elected governor he would resume efforts, thwarted by federal court, to add work requirement to Medicaid
Attorney General Daniel Cameron said Wednesday that if elected governor he would quickly restart Republican efforts to “require some able-bodied adults to work in exchange for health-care coverage through Medicaid,” Bruce Schreiner writes for The Associated Press.
When Republican Matt Bevin was governor, he tried to require able-bodied Medicaid recipients who were not caregivers to work, enroll at least part-time in education or job training, volunteer, or perform other “community engagement” activities to qualify for benefits. A federal judge in Washington, D.C., blocked the move, saying it was not allowed under the 1965 law that created Medicaid and Medicare and noting state estimates that almost 100,000 people would lose coverage, mostly
After Democrat Andy Beshear defeated Bevin in 2019, he dropped the state’s appeal of the court decision, saying his action was the “moral, faith-driven thing to do.” Beshear calls health care a “basic human right,” Schreiner notes. Cameron said Medicaid work rules would be “one of the first things I will do as governor.”
Cameron raised the issue in the primary election, and Wednesday in answering a question about Kentucky’s low workforce participation rate at a Kentucky Farm Bureau Federation forum that Beshear did not attend.