BY NATHANIEL
WEIXEL - 07/17/18 01:42 PM EDT 35
Voters
in Idaho will get to decide in November whether the state will expand Medicaid,
Secretary of State Lawrence Denney announced Tuesday.
Denney
certified that an activist group collected the required 56,192 signatures
needed to place the measure on the ballot.
Supporters
of the measure say it would provide coverage for up to 62,000 Idahoans who now
fall into a coverage gap, making too much to qualify for Medicaid but not
enough to qualify for subsidized health insurance through the state insurance
exchange.
If
the state were to expand Medicaid coverage, the federal government would pay 90
percent of the cost. Idaho is one of 18 states that have yet to expand coverage
under ObamaCare using federal money.
Idaho
joins Utah as red states where Medicaid expansion will be put to a
vote. Nebraska activists turned in enough signatures, and are awaiting
official certification to be eligible. Voters in Montana may also vote on a
measure extending their expansion, which expires in 2019.
Even
if Idaho voters approve the ballot measure in November, state lawmakers and the
governor will have to implement expansion. Most Idaho politicians have opposed
expansion.
Voters
in Maine overwhelmingly approved a ballot measure last year expanding their
state's program, but implementation has been continually blocked by Republican
Gov. Paul LePage. LePage is currently being sued over his refusal.
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