CELEBRITIES
Sanders Wins Every Democrat And 2 GOP Votes To Recover $75B And Reverse Medicaid Cuts
Washington, D.C. — In a rare and stunning show of bipartisan defiance, Bernie Sanders secured every Democratic vote and two Republicans to pass a sweeping measure that recovers $75 billion and reverses deep Medicaid cuts that had threatened healthcare access for millions of Americans.
The vote sent shockwaves through Capitol Hill.
After weeks of closed-door negotiations and mounting public pressure, the amendment passed with a narrow but decisive margin, clawing back funds previously redirected away from healthcare programs and restoring coverage protections for seniors, children, people with disabilities, and low-income families.
🔹 What the Vote Does
💰 Recovers $75 billion redirected from healthcare funding
🏥 Fully reverses Medicaid cuts, restoring benefits and eligibility
👵 Protects care for seniors, veterans, and disabled Americans
⚖️ Signals rare bipartisan resistance to austerity-driven policies
“This is what governing is supposed to look like,” Sanders said following the vote. “When the people speak loudly enough, Congress can still listen.”
The two Republican defections underscored growing unease within GOP ranks over the political and human cost of slashing healthcare programs — especially as hospitals and state governments warned of looming service collapses.
🔥 Why This Matters
Medicaid covers over 70 million Americans. The restored funding is expected to stabilize hospitals, preserve rural healthcare access, and prevent states from imposing new work requirements or coverage limits.
Political analysts say the vote could reshape upcoming budget negotiations — and embolden lawmakers willing to break party lines when public backlash becomes impossible to ignore.
One senior aide summed it up bluntly:
“This wasn’t just a vote. It was a warning shot.”
📌 Bottom line: A united Democratic bloc, unexpected GOP cracks, and a $75B reversal mark one of the most consequential healthcare showdowns of the year — and a clear reminder that Medicaid remains a political third rail.