Judge orders Maine to implement voter-approved Medicaid expansion

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A Maine court has ordered the state to move ahead with Medicaid expansion, which was approved by voters last year but blocked by Republican Gov. Paul LePage. 

Michaela Murphy, a Maine Superior Court justice, ruled Monday afternoon that the state must submit a plan to the federal government by June 11 detailing how it plans to expand Medicaid. 

{mosads}Maine voters approved expansion in November through a citizen-led ballot measure, but LePage has fought back at every turn.

He said he wouldn’t implement expansion unless state legislators found a way to pay for it without raising taxes. But expansion supporters argued the governor’s estimate was too high. 

His administration missed the April 3 deadline to send a plan to the federal government, prompting lawsuits from the Maine Equal Justice Partners and Consumers for Affordable Health Care.

Maine became the first state to expand Medicaid through a voter referendum. 

Medicaid expansion would make eligible an additional 70,000 Maine residents with incomes between 101 percent and 138 percent of the federal poverty level.

Tags Maine Medicaid expansion Paul LePage

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