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Speaker Emerita... mp4
(23.44 MB, 748x404 h264)
(23.44 MB, 748x404 h264)
>>/154822/ Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman (DFL - Brooklyn Park) cast the sole DFL vote, allowing the bill to pass “This one hurt”: DFL leadership grapples with vote to revoke healthcare for undocumented immigrants A bill that will cut access to MinnesotaCare benefits for undocumented immigrants over the age of 18 is on its way to Governor Tim Walz’s desk, and the governor has indicated he intends to sign the bill to uphold the will of the legislature. SAINT PAUL, Minn. (GRAY) – Among the 15 bills passed in Monday’s Minnesota Special Session, one stood out as a clear point of contention. A bill that will cut access to MinnesotaCare benefits for undocumented immigrants over the age of 18 is on its way to Governor Tim Walz’s desk, and the governor has indicated he intends to sign the bill to uphold the will of the legislature. The bill was part of a budget compromise among leadership. Faced with a split legislature—a tied Minnesota House and DFL-controlled Minnesota Senate—leaders negotiated for weeks on a deal that would ensure enough votes from both bodies to get a budget finished. According to DFL lawmakers, Republicans placed the revocation of benefits for undocumented immigrants above all other compromise offers. “There wasn’t really anything that they wanted more than to make this cut, and there wasn’t anything that we were going to do that was going to satisfy them. This was the thing they wanted to do,” said Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy (DFL - Saint Paul). DFL leaders indicated that Republicans were offered changes to paid family and medical leave, earned sick and safe time, and non-compete restrictions, but the House GOP stood firm on making the repeal a part of the deal. House Speaker Lisa Demuth (R - Cold Spring) said they weren’t content with the other offers. “We looked for changes in paid family medical leave and earned sick and safe time, and what was being proposed was talked about with a very high price tag of additional revenue,” said Demuth, “This was not the issue with the undocumented piece and what we were able to handle today. That was not the trade-off whatsoever.” Republicans argue that the bill will save the state money as it eyes an impending budget deficit. The final budget projects a total savings of roughly $56 million in the current legislative biennium. The state’s total human services budget is $16.8 billion. DFL members argue that the costs incurred by allowing access to the program are offset by a decreased number of ER visits. ER visits can cost both providers and patients substantially more than preventive care, and unpaid bills can cause providers to rack up significant costs in uncompensated care. cont...