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How Trump crawl the GOP printing to shorten Medicaid editions

The representative Jeff van Drew, a Republican who has opposed the efforts of his party, to shorten Medicaid for the payment of President Trump's domestic agenda, says he has a strong ally on his side: Mr. Trump himself.

“He doesn't want to hurt Medicaid,” said van Drew, a Member of the Congress from New Jersey. “He didn't even say it twice, three times – it was about half a dozen times. And I had this conversations with him one to one.”

Mr. Trump has traditionally acted as the most effective whip of the Republicans of the Republicans when they are faced with hard voices, personally and in social media bends to the holdouts and threatens to lead an opponent against them if they do not match the party. But when it comes to reducing the GOP legislators with the most politically dangerous piece of their budget plan to club medicaid in order to pay the tax cuts they want to issue, the president has clarified that he will not make arms.

“We don't cut medicaid, we do not cut Medicare and do not reduce social security,” repeated Mr. Trump in an interview with NBC last weekend. He said that he would put a veto against the megabill that carries his agenda through the congress, “if they cut medicaid”. “But they don't cut it,” he added. “They see fraud, waste and abuse. And nobody does it.”

His clear attitude to this matter-said that he does not want to “touch” Medicaid in any way-one reason why the Republicans have so far not failed in order to exceed a cost reduction plan for the program. This in turn left it difficult to create important details of the “a large, beautiful bill” that they try to urge the congress on the solid opposition of the Democrats.

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