"So pick one, and let's discuss it."
...are you trying to hijack the thread?
Never mind.
My pick: Medicaid expansion
The President's health care law expanded the program to 16 million people, the biggest expansion since it was launched in 1966.
Six governors say they will opt out of Medicaid. How long will they hold out?
Posted by Sarah Kliff
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While the stakes are high for the White House, the territory is by no means uncharted. Washington has twice faced off with states over federal health care expansions, when Medicaid initially launched in 1965 and with the Childrens Health Insurance Program in 1997. In both cases, all 50 states ultimately signed up but not without some wrangling.
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Medicaid got a chilly reception when it launched in January 1966. It was up to the states to decide whether to participate and only six initially signed up: Hawaii, Illinois, Minnesota, North Dakota, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania. Twenty-seven followed suit later that year. Across the country, governors weighed the boon of new federal dollars Washington would foot half of Medicaids bill against the drawback of putting state money into a new program.
Nascent Medicaid programs quickly faced threats: Republican legislators in the New York introduced a bill in 1967 calling for the state to live within its means and repeal its Medicaid program.
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Over time, however, the lure of federal dollars proved strong enough to win over resistant states. Eleven joined the program in 1967. Another wave of eight, largely Southern states came on board in 1970. Arizona proved the last holdout, not joining Medicaid until 1982.
- more -
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/wp/2012/07/09/six-governors-say-they-will-opt-out-of-medicaid-how-long-will-they-hold-out/
States stand to lose a lot more than Medicaid funding by refusing the expansion
http://www.democraticunderground.com/1002914241