Trump cuts strip coverage from 450,000 New Yorkers

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — On July 1, 2026, approximately 450,000 New Yorkers lost access to the Essential Plan — a zero-premium, low-copay health insurance program covering working adults who earn too much for Medicaid but too little to afford private coverage.
According to a report from The Guardian, the cuts follow H.R. 1, the “Big Beautiful Bill,” which reduced annual federal funding for the program by $7.5 billion, forcing New York State to narrow eligibility and leave a segment of its lowest-income working population uninsured.
Essential plan closed healthcare’s middle-income gap
The Essential Plan, established in 2015 under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), provided zero-dollar monthly premiums, no deductibles, and low copays to enrollees earning between 200% and 250% of the federal poverty level — a demographic routinely excluded from both public and private health insurance systems.
At its peak, more than 1.7 million New Yorkers were enrolled. Gov. Kathy Hochul’s administration negotiated a federal waiver that preserved affordable health coverage for 1.3 million enrollees — but could not prevent the loss for the remaining 450,000.
“Donald Trump and Republicans chose to give billionaires tax cuts and launch reckless wars overseas instead of lowering healthcare costs for New York families,” said Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-New York).
The 450,000 losing coverage are not a marginal population — they are working adults in the income range where neither Medicaid nor employer-sponsored insurance provides a reliable safety net, now left to seek alternatives in a market where ACA subsidies have also expired.
Coverage losses signal a national pattern
New York’s situation reflects a policy architecture taking shape nationally. Congress allowed federal ACA marketplace subsidies to expire this year, cutting off premium support for households earning more than 400% of the federal poverty level and driving premium increases for millions who remain enrolled.
Gov. Hochul was direct about the limits of state action: “From the beginning, I sounded the alarm about the devastating impact H.R. 1 would have on our hospitals and health care system, and made clear that no state can fully backfill cuts this severe.”
The Congressional Budget Office projects 7.8 million more Americans will be uninsured by 2034 as a result of Medicaid changes alone — a figure the Urban Institute places higher, at up to 10.1 million fewer Medicaid enrollees by 2028.
For healthcare outsourcing providers managing Medicaid enrollment, eligibility verification, and insurance navigation services, coverage contraction means an expanding population requires re-enrollment support, coverage counseling, and administrative transitions — work that scales with displacement, not with coverage.
In New York, the displacement started July 1. Nearly half a million people are now looking for coverage that no longer exists for them.

Independent




