A Story From Imani Gandy:

Trump’s Second Term Hits Different Now That I’m Out—Opinion

Sep 24, 2025, 9:00am Imani Gandy

The target on my back got bigger once I stepped into the light.

Brown hands making a heart shape with the colors of the Pride flag filling the heart. The hands are placed over top of a red background with a gavel, Project 2025 papers, the U.S. Capitol, and hearts sketched into it.Queer people don’t have the luxury of treating Trump’s anti-LGBTQ+ actions as a simple policy debate. Cage Rivera/Rewire News Group

I often joke about being a Meredith Baxter gay. You may remember her as Meredith Baxter Birney, the woman who played Elyse Keaton on Family TiesShe came out as a lesbian in 2009, when she was 62. I don’t know why Baxter is stuck in my mind as the quintessential “coming out later in life” queen. Plenty of people have come out late in life, but I’m firmly Gen X, so somehow she became my northstar of late-stage queerness.

When I finally came out at 50 in 2024, it wasn’t particularly dramatic. It was quiet and overdue. Something inside me had been waiting for years, tapping its foot, wondering when I’d finally be ready to stop pretending. Maybe that’s why I’m writing this column—to elicit a reaction that’s more dramatic than “no shit, Imani.”

Coming out later in life means you’ve probably already got bad knees and sciatica. I certainly do. I can’t drop it low anymore unless there’s a paramedic nearby to hoist me up. I missed the whole glamorous L Word era because, even though I knew I was at least a little gay around the edges, I had no idea what to do about it. I was even living in Los Angeles when The L Word was on the air. I knew all the places I could go if I wanted to spread my gay wings.

But I couldn’t bring myself to do it. I just kept plodding on and trying to date men. I even considered marrying two different men in my 20s and 30s. And I bless the rains down in Africa that I didn’t, because both marriages would have ended up in disaster.

Sometimes I grieve for the queer Imani who could have been tearing it up in Los Angeles in 2002. But I can’t go back; I can only move forward. And I’m moving forward with an additional identity that colors the way I move through the world.

And on top of that, I’m moving through that world under Trump 2.0.

As a Black woman, I never needed Donald Trump to show me who he was. I clocked him from the jump. Racist, misogynist, wannabe strongman—it was all right there. His first term was terrifying. Not in the politics is messy way, but in the this man will torch democracy if doing so makes him feel powerful way.

But this time hits different. Because now I’m out.

Project 2025’s ‘dark plan’ for LGBTQ+ rights

When Trump was in office the first time, I wasn’t living openly as a queer woman. I fought his administration on reproductive rightsvoting rights, immigration, and racial justice in part by highlighting the misinformation and half-truths that are the core features of the conservative effort to impose Christian theocracy on queer people, immigrants, people of color—on basically anyone who doesn’t fit neatly into their straight, white, Christian box.

That’s because I’m a person who deeply believes in justice. Hell, I’ve dedicated my life to reproductive justice even though I’ve never been pregnant. Never had an abortion. (My girlfriend says it’s because I’m extremely empathetic and I hate injustice.)

But I didn’t feel the daily, stomach-clenching fear of watching a government try to erase LGBTQ+ rights while knowing my own life was on the line.

Now I do.

(Imani’s new podcast drops on Sept. 25, 2025. Subscribe to Boom! Lawyered to be the first to hear it.)

Trump’s first term was hardly neutral on queer people. He banned trans people from serving in the military. He rescinded guidance telling schools to protect trans students. His Department of Justice claimed in court that businesses should be able to fire workers just for being gay. He proposed gutting nondiscrimination protections in health care so doctors could refuse to treat trans patients. He appointed judges who seem to pride themselves on being hostile to LGBTQ+ rights.

Now, we’ve got Trump 2.0—and the plan is even darker. His allies wrote it all down in Project 2025, a 900-page blueprint for turning the country into a Christian nationalist theocracy. Project 2025 is about reframing queer identity and sexual expression as obscenity, criminalizing it, and pushing LGBTQ+ people out of public life.

The Supreme Court is already helping this project along, as I wrote back in July. This past term, the Court handed Christian conservatives two major wins: Mahmoud v. Taylor and Free Speech Coalition, Inc. v. Paxton.

In Mahmoudreligious parents in Maryland didn’t want their kids reading age-appropriate LGBTQ+-inclusive books like Uncle Bobby’s WeddingPrince & KnightPride Puppy! These children’s books don’t contain anything graphic or explicit; they just acknowledge that queer families exist.

In a 6-3 decision, the Supreme Court sided with the parents. Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito said parents should get a heads-up and the chance to opt out of any lessons with LGBTQ+ content “until all appellate review in this case is completed”—a process that could take years.

Alito gussied up his argument as “religious liberty,” arguing that requiring parents to submit their children to instruction that contradicts their religious beliefs constitutes a burden on religious exercise. But let’s be real: It’s a green light for parents to purge classrooms of queer content. Schools under pressure won’t build complex opt-out systems for kids whose parents object to these texts. They’ll just pull the books from classrooms.

Then there’s the Free Speech Coalition case. The Supreme Court upheld a law Texas passed in 2023 requiring age verification to access “sexually explicit” content online. Sounds like it’s about porn, right? But Project 2025 calls for a ban on pornography not just in the good, old-fashioned sense of the word. It expands the definition of porn in a way that can easily be interpreted to cover materials commonly found in a high school library, like books on sexual health, puberty, and information on sexual orientation and identity for LGBTQ+ youth.

To the architects of Project 2025, a book on puberty or a novel with queer characters is basically Hustler magazine.

(Read more: SCOTUS Gives Project 2025 Two Big Anti-LGBTQ+ Wins)

Put Mahmoud and Free Speech Coalition together, and you see the playbook: Queer identity equals obscenity. Queer books? Obscene. Queer websites? Obscene. Porn? Criminal. Once you collapse all of that into the same bucket, it’s open season on LGBTQ+ people and culture.

This is the blueprint Trump and his allies are running with. Not just another round of chaos, but a coordinated effort to erase queer life—through schools, libraries, the internet, and the courts.

That’s why this second term feels different

It’s not that I didn’t know Trump was dangerous before—I did. But because I’m out now, I feel these attacks land in a new place.

It’s my life. My love. My newly-formed family. My right to be visible without being treated like contraband or pretending that my girlfriend, Portia, is my sister.

Coming out didn’t make Trump more dangerous. It made the danger he presents impossible to intellectualize away.

Straight people can treat this as just another policy debate. Queer people don’t have that luxury. We know our lives and relationships are bargaining chips in a theocracy that Christian nationalists are trying to build one opt-out, one website ban, one court case at a time.

So yeah, Trump’s second term hits different because the target on my back got bigger once I stepped into the light.

And that’s the gut punch: Trump doesn’t just threaten democracy in the abstract now—he threatens the most personal parts of my life.

Reblog From Janet

Working With Our States On Resources Still Available To US

There is a great deal of info here. It is important for we the people to know, though, because it helps us when we or others need these resources. -A

Medicaid Eligibility and Enrollment Rules Lay Framework for Program Improvements States Can Still Adopt, Despite Moratorium

September 24, 2025 | By Farah Erzouki

As part of historic cuts to Medicaid that will take health coverage away from millions, the Republican megabill enacted in July places a ten-year moratorium on implementing portions of two recently codified Medicaid eligibility and enrollment rules, effectively repealing them.[1] While these provisions are no longer mandatory, many remain optional. States can and should still voluntarily implement these approaches to streamline eligibility and ensure as many eligible people as possible enroll in and retain Medicaid coverage.

Congress blocked parts of two rules that were adopted by the Biden Administration to make it easier for eligible enrollees — particularly seniors, people with disabilities, and children enrolled in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) — to get and stay enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP. The first rule, finalized in 2023, addressed many barriers that eligible seniors experience when accessing Medicare Savings Programs (MSPs).[2] The second rule, finalized in April 2024, codified many important policies that simplify the process for eligible people, including older adults and people with disabilities (the non-MAGI population), children, and pregnant people to get and stay enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP.[3]States should continue implementing optional portions of the rules to increase efficiency and further improve and streamline their programs so that eligible people can more easily get and keep their coverage.

States still must comply with the portions of the eligibility and enrollment rules that had already taken effect before Congress enacted the ten-year moratorium, which mostly affects parts of the rules that had not yet gone into effect.[4] The blocked provisions include amendments from the Centers on Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to clarify and simplify long-standing regulatory provisions and mandates for states to follow newly created best practices. Even though some of these clarifications have been blocked, the underlying requirements remain intact, and states must follow them.

Importantly, though the blocked policies are no longer mandatory, they remain optional and are not in conflict with other regulations, except in a handful of cases. Because the blocked policies would have increased efficiency and improved and streamlined programs so that eligible people could more easily get and keep their coverage, states should proceed in implementing now-optional portions of the rules. In a few cases, blocked provisions are not allowed because of how existing regulations are written.

The two tables below outline the status of each provision in the final rules and whether it is still in place and required; blocked and now optional for states; clarifications are blocked but the underlying rules are still required; or blocked and no longer allowed.[5] Additional discussion of these provisions follows the tables.

Snip-they paste in ginormously, so I’m leaving them there, and referring you to the page, linked in the headline. The original table is also linked just below.

Source: Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), “Streamlining Medicaid; Medicare Savings Program Eligibility Determination and Enrollment,” 88 Fed. Reg. 65230, September 21, 2023, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2023-09-21/pdf/2023-20382.pdf.

Source: HHS, “Medicaid Program; Streamlining the Medicaid, Children’s Health Insurance Program, and Basic Health Program Application, Eligibility Determination, Enrollment, and Renewal Processes,” 89 Fed. Reg. 22780, April 2, 2024, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2024-04-02/pdf/2024-06566.pdf.

States Should Continue Implementing Simplified Processes

Most states have already implemented parts of the rules that weren’t blocked, since those generally had effective dates that have already passed. Those provisions are still required, and states shouldn’t make any changes to those parts of their policies and systems.

As the tables above outline, the majority of the provisions that were blocked are no longer required, but they remain optional for states. Many states are likely in the process of implementing those provisions (or have already implemented them) and should continue moving forward with these changes that streamline eligibility for seniors, people with disabilities, and others.

Streamlining MSP Enrollment

The final rule includes a number of provisions for states to better facilitate and streamline MSP enrollment.[6] MSPs, administered through state Medicaid programs, offer significant help with the costs of Medicare premiums and cost-sharing to older adults and people with disabilities who are dually eligible for Medicaid and Medicare.[7] However, many more people are eligible for MSPs than are enrolled, and these provisions were aimed at increasing MSP enrollment among those eligible but not enrolled.

Provision Not Blocked, Remains Required

Automatic enrollment of certain Supplemental Security Income (SSI) recipients in the QMB eligibility group when they enroll in Medicaid (42 C.F.R. §435.909). People enrolled in Medicare who also receive SSI benefits are eligible for the QMB MSP group in addition to full Medicaid. However, many states require a separate application for QMB, which creates an additional layer of bureaucracy that deters eligible people from enrolling. This provision is aimed at removing this layer of bureaucracy and maximizing QMB enrollment.

The final rule requires 36 states and the District of Columbia, considered Part A “buy-in” states, to automatically enroll SSI recipients in the QMB eligibility group when they enroll in Medicaid. [8] The policy remains optional for 14 states that are referred to as “group payer” states, but these states should also strive to make enrollment for SSI recipients in QMB automatic.

Provision Blocked, Remains State Option

  • Aligning LIS and MSP family size definitions and income counting rules (42 C.F.R. §435.601(e)). CMS historically allowed states to apply their own definition of family size when determining household-based income limits for MSP eligibility. State MSP definitions that don’t align with LIS make it difficult for state agencies to expedite enrollment of LIS recipients into MSPs, since agencies often have to contact applicants for additional information if the definitions don’t align. The final rule required, and states can still implement, a definition of MSP family size to be “at least” those who are included in the LIS definition. States can also choose to align income counting rules for the programs to further streamline enrollment of LIS recipients into MSPs.
  • Accepting self-attestation for certain types of income and resources (42 C.F.R. §435.952(e)). Existing Medicaid regulations provide states the option to allow an MSP applicant’s self-attestation of all eligibility criteria except for citizenship and immigration status.[9] The final rule required states to accept self-attestation of certain types of income and resources such as non-liquid resources and burial funds up to $1,500 for purposes of determining eligibility for MSPs. States should accept self-attestation for these types of income and resources to further streamline MSP enrollment and reduce paperwork and documentation requests.
  • Clarifying the effective date of QMB enrollment for certain individuals living in “group payer” states (42 C.F.R. §406.21(c)(5)). The QMB Program pays for Part A premiums and Part B premiums, deductibles, copayments, and coinsurance. QMB enrollment for those who live in “group payer” states is particularly challenging. When states use the group payer arrangement to pay Part A premiums, certain enrollment restrictions apply, such as only being able to apply for Medicare Part A during the Medicare General Enrollment Period (January 1-March 31 of each year) if applicants did not enroll during their Initial Enrollment Period. The Part A effective date was recently changed to be the first month after enrollment, and the final rule aligned the QMB effective date with the new Part A effective date for those living in group payer states. States can still align their effective dates to ensure that eligible people receive the financial assistance they need to participate in Part A.

Clarifying Provision Blocked, Underlying Regulation Remains Required

Using Low-Income Subsidy (LIS) data for MSP applications (42 C.F.R. §435.911(e)). Known as “Extra Help,” LIS helps pay prescription drug costs under Medicare Part D. LIS is federally administered by the Social Security Administration (SSA). Many people who enroll in LIS are eligible for MSPs, but state Medicaid agencies do not enroll them automatically.

The Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 (MIPPA) requires SSA to share data from LIS applications (‘‘leads data’’) with state Medicaid agencies and requires that, based on that data, agencies ‘‘shall initiate’’ an MSP application. However, not all states have done so. As a result, even though most of the over 14 million LIS enrollees are eligible for MSPs, over 1 million are not enrolled.[10] Using LIS data for MSP enrollment would significantly reduce the paperwork burden that applicants often face when applying for MSPs and would eliminate verification requests for information that the state Medicaid agency could access using LIS or other data. While a provision clarifying this rule was blocked, states are still expected to use LIS leads data from SSA to initiate an MSP application based on the MIPPA provision.

Alignment of Non-MAGI Policies With MAGI Practices

The Affordable Care Act’s (ACA) simplified eligibility and enrollment processes for MAGI enrollees were not extended to non-MAGI enrollees, including seniors and people with disabilities. As a result, non-MAGI enrollees often need to take additional steps to enroll and stay enrolled in coverage. The final rule sought to build on the ACA streamlining rules by aligning the enrollment and renewal processes for non-MAGI enrollees with MAGI requirements. Despite the moratorium, states can still take important steps to streamline procedures for non-MAGI enrollees.

Provision Not Blocked, Remains Required

Apply primacy of electronic verification and reasonable compatibility standard for resources (42 C.F.R. §§435.940, 435.952). The final rule also added provisions to clarify the requirements at 435.952 and 435.940 for states to implement and utilize asset verification systems to more seamlessly electronically verify non-MAGI enrollee assets at application and renewal,[11] and apply a reasonable compatibility standard for assets. Such a standard allows for self-attestation and information from data sources to be considered “reasonably compatible” if they are both below, at, or above the eligibility threshold, even if the amount of income in the attestation is different from the amount in the electronic data source.[12] This was expected of states based on how the original regulations were written, but many states did not interpret it as such. Reasonable compatibility is commonly used for income verification but was not required for asset verification. Under this policy, the client attestation and data source are considered “reasonably compatible” if they are both below the eligibility threshold, reducing requests for additional information. This provision was not blocked, so states must continue to apply primacy of electronic verification and a reasonable compatibility standard for assets.

Provision Blocked, Remains State Option

States have always had the option of aligning their MAGI processes to non-MAGI enrollees and most states have already done so.[13] Even though the reconciliation bill blocked provisions that would have made these options requirements, states that have not already adopted these options should still implement the streamlining practices, including:

  • Aligning the application and enrollment process with MAGI requirements (42 C.F.R. §435.907(d)). When requesting information from non-MAGI applicants, states should provide 15 days or more to respond and allow applicants to provide requested information through all modes of submission. States should also provide a 90-day reconsideration period if an application was denied for not providing the requested information, which allows for the requested information to be treated as a new application if submitted within 90 calendar days, rather than terminating an enrollee’s coverage and requiring them to submit a new application. States should also prohibit in-person interviews as part of the application process to reduce burden on non-MAGI applicants, many of whom may experience difficulties participating in an in-person interview due to mobility issues, lack of transportation, among other barriers.
  • Aligning the renewal process with MAGI requirements (42 C.F.R. §435.916). This includes renewing non-MAGI enrollees no more frequently than every 12 months, providing pre-populated renewal forms with a minimum of 30 days to respond, providing a 90-day reconsideration period[14] if an enrollee’s coverage was terminated for not completing the renewal process, and prohibiting states from requiring an in-person interview as part of the renewal process.

Implementing these policies will reduce red tape and administrative burden, making the application and renewal processes more accessible for non-MAGI groups and reducing both agency and client burden. 

Clarifying Provision Blocked, Underlying Regulation Remains Required

Allow non-MAGI applicants to provide applications and supplemental forms through all modes of submission allowed for MAGI applicants (42 CFR §435.907(c)(4)). Among the blocked policies was a provision that clarified an existing requirement (at 42 C.F.R. §435.907(c)) for states to accept applications and supplemental forms needed to complete an application from non-MAGI enrollees via all modalities (e.g., telephone, mail, online). Though the clarification was blocked, states still must accept applications and supplemental forms via all modalities as has been required, but not consistently applied, for non-MAGI groups.

CHIP Improvements

In addition to improvements for non-MAGI enrollees, the final rule also removed barriers to CHIP enrollment by prohibiting practices that were previously optional for states.[15] These provisions went into effect last year and were not blocked through reconciliation.

Provision Not Blocked, Remains Required

  • No CHIP lockout periods when premiums are not paid (42 C.F.R. §457.570(c)).
  • No waiting periods to enroll after becoming uninsured (42 C.F.R. §§457.65(d), 457.805(b), 457.810(a)).
  • No lifetime or annual limits to receiving coverage (42 C.F.R. §457.480).
  • Improved transitions between Medicaid and CHIP (42 C.F.R. §§431.10, 435.1200(b)1, 435.1200(b)(3)(vi), 435.1200(b)(4), 435,1200(c), 435.1200(e)(1)(i), 435.1200(e)(4), 435.1200h(3), 457.348, 457.350), including:
    • Requiring each program to also determine eligibility for the other program,
    • Accepting eligibility determinations made by the other program,
    • Transitioning applicants to the coverage they are or could be eligible for; and
    • Providing a single, combined eligibility determination notice to all household members.

Eliminating Barriers to Coverage

In addition to the policy improvements that addressed challenges faced by older adults, people with disabilities, and children, the final rule also made changes that better streamline Medicaid enrollment and renewal processes for all applicants and enrollees. Some of the provisions remain in place and, as with other sections of the rules, states still have opportunities to adopt many of the policies that are affected by the bill’s moratorium on elements of the rule.

Provision Not Blocked, Remains Required

  • Stronger recordkeeping practices (42 C.F.R. §§431.17, 435.914(a), 435.914(b), 457.965). The final rule modernizes recordkeeping rules that had not been changed since 1986 and includes requirements such as maintaining records in an electronic format, specifying what information related to an enrollee’s application or renewal should be included in the file, maintaining records for a minimum of three years, and specifying how and when states should make the records available to outside agencies or parties authorized to review them.
  • No limit on the number of reasonable opportunity periods (42 C.F.R. §435.956(b)(4)). State agencies are required to provide a “reasonable opportunity period” of 90 days to provide satisfactory proof of citizenship or immigration status when the agency is unable to verify an individual’s attestation. The final rule restricts limitations on the number of reasonable opportunity periods that an applicant may be granted, giving people more opportunity to secure documents from agencies that can be slow to respond.[16]
  • No requirement to apply for all other benefits (42 C.F.R. §§435.608, 436.608). Old rules required Medicaid applicants and enrollees to apply for income and resources (benefits) “available” to them such as pensions, retirement, and disability benefits as a condition of their eligibility (unless they could show good cause for not doing so). This rule imposed administrative burdens on individuals seeking health coverage and often delayed the application process. The final rule removes the regulation and redefines the income and resources “available” to applicants and enrollees as only those that are within their immediate control, effectively eliminating the requirement to apply for other benefits as a condition of eligibility.
  • Facilitate enrollment by allowing “medically needy” individuals to deduct prospective available medical expenses (42 C.F.R. §§435.831, 436.831). “Medically needy” individuals have incomes too high to be eligible for Medicaid but have medical costs so high that they are able to “spend down” to become income-eligible for Medicaid. Previously, medically needy individuals had to submit documentation of the expenses they incurred before their Medicaid coverage kicked in. In some cases, this led to people churning in and out of coverage depending on the timing of their medical costs and agency procedures to verify financial eligibility. The final rule lets state agencies project those medical expenses that are constant and predictable into the future, allowing enrollees with ongoing medical needs to remain enrolled without breaks in coverage.

Provision Blocked, Remains State Option

  • Improving Medicaid agency processes for updated address information (42 C.F.R. §§435.919, 457.344). The final rule sought to standardize a process for state agencies to update enrollee contact information, including specifying which data sources are considered reliable, what actions agencies should take when receiving address updates (or when returned mail has no forwarding address), and requiring agencies to make a “good-faith effort” to contact an enrollee to confirm updated address information through two or more modalities, such as via text and email. While this provision of the rule was blocked through the megabill, beginning on October 1, 2029, a separate section in the new legislation requires state agencies to collect updated address information from reliable data sources, including returned mail and managed care entities, and delegates authority to the Secretary of HHS to specify what actions states can take after receiving updated address information.[17] While awaiting further guidance from CMS, state agencies should continue to implement the best practices the final rule sought to standardize around obtaining updated address information and contacting enrollees to resolve discrepancies.
  • Establishing specific requirements for acting on changes in circumstances (42 C.F.R. §§435.919, 457.344, 457.960). Enrollees are required to report changes in circumstances that could impact their eligibility during their eligibility period, and state agencies are required to act on such reports or on data they receive that indicate a change that could impact eligibility. The final rule outlined procedures for state agencies regarding changes in circumstance, such as communicating to enrollees the process for reporting changes, and actions the agency must take when they receive information about an enrollee’s change in circumstance. The rule also applied the same timeliness standards for enrollees to respond when changes are either reported by them or if the state receives data indicating a change. These include providing enrollees 30 days to submit requested information and providing enrollees a 90-day reconsideration period so the enrollee does not have to fully reapply. Though this provision was blocked, states can still implement these best practices to better streamline the process for addressing either enrollee-provided information that could affect eligibility or information received from a third party (such as through a data match).
  • Ensuring reasonable timeframes for determinations and redeterminations at application, renewal, and following changes in circumstance (42 C.F.R. §§435.907(d), 435.912, 457.1170). The final rule established more specific timeliness requirements for states to adhere to when processing renewals and changes in circumstance. The rule also required states to provide a minimum number of days for individuals to return requested information and documentation to their state agency — 15 days for information requested at application and 30 days for information requested during a renewal or for a change in circumstance. Though this provision was blocked, state Medicaid agencies can use the timeframes laid out in the rule for their application and renewal processes, and notably, they still cannot terminate coverage for individuals who have returned their information until their renewal is fully processed.[18]

Provision Blocked, No Longer Allowed

Simplifies verification of citizenship and identity (42 C.F.R. §435.407). Currently, states are required to verify citizenship and identity first through SSA data, and if unsuccessful, through alternative methods such as state vital statistics records or through the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) program. When these systems are used to verify citizenship, individuals must also provide proof of identity. This provision would have considered verification of birth with a state vital statistics agency or verification of citizenship with DHS SAVE as stand-alone evidence of citizenship (similar to SSA data) without needing to provide additional proof of identity. Due to the moratorium, states will still have to request verification of identity when using these sources to verify citizenship.

HealthMedicaid and CHIP    

 PDF of this report (17 pp.)

More on this topic

Blog

Setting the Record Straight on the Medicaid Eligibility and Enrollment Rules

January 21, 2025

Database

State Landscape: Detailing Eligibility & Enrollment Practices in Medicaid, SNAP, TANF, and WIC

June 27, 2025

Timeline

Implementation of New Federal Rules and Policies in Medicaid

April 3, 2025

Policy Basics
Health

End Notes

[1] Because the bill placed a moratorium on implementation of the rules, the Code of Federal Regulations may still show new provisions added by the two rules, even though they are not currently in effect. Throughout this paper, we refer to the provisions that are temporarily blocked by the moratoria provisions in sections 71101 and 71102 of P.L. 119-21 as “blocked” provisions.

[2] Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), “Streamlining Medicaid; Medicare Savings Program Eligibility Determination and Enrollment,” 88 Fed. Reg. 65230, September 21, 2023, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2023-09-21/pdf/2023-20382.pdf.

[3] HHS, “Medicaid Program; Streamlining the Medicaid, Children’s Health Insurance Program, and Basic Health Program Application, Eligibility Determination, Enrollment, and Renewal Processes,” 89 Fed. Reg. 22780, April 2, 2024, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2024-04-02/pdf/2024-06566.pdf.

[4] While the House bill initially blocked the entire rule with minimal exceptions, the Senate Parliamentarian ruled that additional provisions could not be blocked, presumably because they were already in effect.

[5] A number of provisions in the final rules included miscellaneous changes that did not change policy, such as changing references, definitions or language used to describe something, removing headings, and removing and redesignating sections. Such sections include 42 C.F.R. §§ 431.213(d), 431.231(d), 435.4, 435.222, and 435.911(a).

[6] Farah Erzouki, “Federal Rule on Medicare Savings Programs Will Cut Red Tape for Older Adults and People With Disabilities,” CBPP, May 3, 2024, https://www.cbpp.org/research/health/federal-rule-on-medicare-savings-programs-will-cut-red-tape-for-older-adults-and.

[7] Some individuals who are eligible for both Medicaid and Medicare receive full Medicaid benefits along with Medicare and may also receive assistance through MSPs. Partial dual eligibles are enrolled in Medicare and receive assistance from MSPs to help afford that coverage. Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission (MACPAC), Medicare Savings Programs, https://www.macpac.gov/subtopic/medicare-savings-programs/.

[8] All states must pay the Part A premium for QMB enrollees who do not receive premium-free Part A; “buy-in” states include the Part A premium cost for QMBs in their existing buy-in agreement, which helps facilitate automatic enrollment in QMB any time of the year. When states use the group payer arrangement to pay Part A premiums, certain enrollment restrictions apply, such as only being able to apply for Medicare Part A during the Medicare General Enrollment Period (January 1-March 31 of each year) if they did not enroll during their Initial Enrollment Period (three months before turning 65 and three months after the month the individual turns 65, lasting seven months total). CMS, “Program Overview and Policy: Chapter 1,” https://www.cms.gov/files/document/chapter-1-program-overview-and-policy.pdf.

[9] 42 CFR § 435.945(a).

[10] KFF, “Number of Low-Income Subsidy (LIS) Enrollees,” https://www.kff.org/medicare/state-indicator/number-of-low-income-subsidy-lis-enrollees/?currentTimeframe=0&sortModel=%7B%22colId%22:%22Location%22,%22sort%22:%22asc%22%7D; HHS.

[11] Farah Erzouki and Jennifer Wagner, “Using Asset Verification Systems to Streamline Medicaid Determinations,” CBPP, June 23, 2021, https://www.cbpp.org/research/health/using-asset-verification-systems-to-streamline-medicaid-determinations.

[12] Jennifer Wagner, “Reasonable Compatibility Policy Presents an Opportunity to Streamline Medicaid Determinations,” CBPP, August 16, 2016, https://www.cbpp.org/research/reasonable-compatibility-policy-presents-an-opportunity-to-streamline-medicaid.

[13] Alice Burns et al., “Medicaid Eligibility and Enrollment Policies for Seniors and People with Disabilities (Non-MAGI) During the Unwinding”, KFF, June 20, 2024, https://www.kff.org/report-section/medicaid-eligibility-and-enrollment-policies-for-seniors-and-people-with-disabilities-non-magi-during-the-unwinding-appendix/.

[14] Section 435.919(d): “If an individual terminated for not returning requested information in accordance with this section subsequently submits the information within 90 calendar days after the date of termination, or a longer period elected by the State, the agency must reconsider the individual’s eligibility without requiring a new application.”

[15] Tricia Brooks and Allexa Gardner, “Medicaid Eligibility and Enrollment Rule Explainer,” Georgetown Center for Children and Families, April 11, 2024, https://ccf.georgetown.edu/2024/04/11/medicaid-eligibility-and-enrollment-rule-explainer/.

[16] When people enroll in Medicaid they are asked under penalty of perjury if they are a citizen, and for those who aren’t, if they have an eligible immigration status. In both cases the application asks applicants to provide relevant government-issued document numbers. These numbers along with other information about the applicant is shared through electronic data exchanges with either the Social Security Administration (SSA) in the case of a citizenship attestation or the Department of Homeland Security’s Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) in the case of people with eligible immigration status and citizens who completed the naturalization process. Many people can have their status verified easily and quickly through this process, but some cannot. For example, SSA can’t always substantiate citizenship of people born abroad if their Social Security number (SSN) was issued prior to the late 1970s, before SSA began verifying citizenship status when issuing SSNs. Because it can take time for agencies to notify the applicant that more information is needed, for the applicant to find and send documents, and for the agency to take steps to process documents, multiple reasonable opportunity periods are sometimes necessary.

[17] Section 71103 of P.L. 119-21.

[18] 42 C.F.R. § 435.912(g)(2), 42 C.F.R. § 435.930(b).

Another Comment Regarding Autism

From Barry:

I would only add that POTUS’s claims are an attack on pregnant people, too. Pregnancy is a complicated and physically painful condition to undergo, and that’s prior to labor which is different (and shorter, even when long.) Barry’s points about continuing to misrepresent and marginalize autistic people are well made and well taken. Pregnancy, as well, should not be misrepresented as something other than a serious medical condition.

Some News (Tabs From Tuesday)

Some of it is not being covered so well elsewhere, what with the proponents being women and all, so some may still be new this morning! 🙂 A bit of blue language.

WELCOME BACK, JIMMY! Tabs, Tues., Sept. 23, 2025 by Rebecca Schoenkopf

CAN’T KEEP A FREE SPEECH DOWN. Read on Substack

Tabs .gifs by Martini Glambassador! Did I repeat one? Oh well if I did LOOK AT IT AGAIN

Good morning, it’s a short tabs because it just is, and because OH LOOKIE HERE?

https://embed.bsky.app/embed/did:plc:ihpglfqq3dapqjmwl2ntktil/app.bsky.feed.post/3lzh5zkhvpc2j?id=278835588257752

Ha, fuckers, ha!

But will MAGA hack companies Sinclair and Nexstar put it on their air? Who knows.

But we guess Disney got hurt right in the wallet. And it’s got to be pretty embarrassing when big Hulu documentaries are coming out and the literal stars of them (Sarah McLachlan) are declining to perform at the premieres, because of this whole censorship/fascism crisis we are in. Did you hear about that? That happened. [Billboard]

Um, we did not realize Trump was already babbling and making up “sir” stories about men with tears in their eyes in Memphis thanking him for the National Guard, but they have not been deployed.

https://embed.bsky.app/embed/did:plc:27jrcf2nmsofvwqcf6ztcnxy/app.bsky.feed.post/3lzgxktll2d23?id=8841689470383374

Anyway, crime is down in Memphis. It has nothing to do with shit nor shinola done by Donald J. Trump. [Tennessee Lookout]

Doctor Donald Trump says the old Ass Met Min Fin — how you say it? Words is hard — is more commonly known as “tylenol” and is definitely what causes the autism. You betcha.

hereswhykevin

A post shared by @hereswhykevin

Politico reports that Trump and Marco Rubio have absolutely destroyed the state of American diplomacy around the world. We knew that, but interesting details in this article. [Politico]

You guyssssssss, Tom Homan and Kristi Noem are having a diva fight about who goes on TV too much, you guyssssssss. [Daily Beast]

There was no Moral High Ground this week, because I’ve been out and about. It’ll be back later this week, but why don’t you go subscribe to it anyway? [The Moral High Ground]

Tuesday Night’s Josh Day Set

Timely and informative, as only Josh delivers-enjoy!

Same As Here In The USA

We each and all have to be diligent with checking what we post before we post it, because this is real, and it’s in many places.

Snippet from BBC:

A secret Russian-funded network is attempting to disrupt upcoming democratic elections in an eastern European state, the BBC has found.

Using an undercover reporter, we discovered the network promised to pay participants if they posted pro-Russian propaganda and fake news undermining Moldova’s pro-EU ruling party ahead of the country’s 28 September parliamentary ballot.

Participants were paid to find supporters of Moldova’s pro-Russia opposition to secretly record – and also to carry out a so-called poll. This was done in the name of a non-existent organisation, making it illegal. The results of this selective sampling, an organiser from the network suggested, could lay the groundwork to question the outcome of the election.

The results of the so-called poll, suggesting the ruling party will lose, have already been published online. (snip-go read it)

Colin Kaepernick Still Out There Being A Good Person

Tell-It Report: Colin Kaepernick to Fund Independent Autopsy For Trey Reed by Michael Harriot

The Delta State University student was found hanging from a tree on campus on Sept. 15. Read on Substack

In Gullah Geechee communities, a “tell-it” was a designated lookout, community warning system and the most trusted source for news and information. The Tell-It Report is ContrabandCamp’s weekly roundup of the Black stories that deserve more attention — from politics to entertainment.

Colin Kaepernick’s Know Your Rights Camp will fund the independent autopsy for Demartravion “Trey” Reed, who was found hanging from a tree in Mississippi. The state medical examiner has ruled his death a suicide.

The Black unemployment rate has increased by 1.5% in the last three months.

The Justice Department has quietly scrubbed from its website a study that shows that right-wing extremists have killed more Americans than any other domestic terrorist group.

Read the full stories below:

Colin Kaepernick will fund Trey Reed’s autopsy after officials initially called it suicide

Activist and former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick is funding an independent autopsy for Demartravion “Trey” Reed, the 21-year-old Delta State student who was found hanging from a tree on the Cleveland, Miss., campus on Sept. 15.

The Cleveland Police Department released a statement on Sept. 18 stating that the initial autopsy, conducted by the Mississippi State Medical Examiner’s Office, ruled Reed’s death a suicide. Days prior, Delta State’s Director of Public Safety Mike Peeler said that there was no evidence of foul play. Reed’s family challenged their findings and is demanding answers.

On Friday, Ben Crump announced that Kaepernick’s “Know Your Rights Camp Autopsy Initiative” would be covering the cost of a secondary autopsy.

“Trey’s death evoked the collective memory of a community that has suffered a historic wound over many, many years and many, many deaths,” Crump said in a press release. “Peace will come only by getting to the truth. We thank Colin Kaepernick for supporting this grieving family and the cause of justice and truth.”

The statement read that the family will initiate the process once Reed’s body is released by the state medical examiner.

Reed’s body was found hanging on the Mississippi university’s campus, where nearly half of the student body is Black. The case evoked memories of the violent history of the Jim Crow South.

Mississippi Department of Public Safety Commissioner Sean Tindell said he “condemn[s] the rumors circulating regarding his death.”

“We are getting mixed information. We are hearing everything on the media. We just want answers and truth because he was a young man I really loved,” Reed’s uncle, Jerry Reed, told Fox 13.

Family attorney Vanessa J. Jones told the local outlet prior to his death that Reed had spent time happy and with his family.

“He was here with his family. He was joyful and loving as ever. That is what he is being remembered for,” Jones said. “When he went back to Delta State University, he was his joyful self. So, the question is, ‘What happened?’”

​​Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson is demanding a federal investigation.

“We must leave no stone unturned in the search for answers,” the Mississippi representative said. “While the details of this case are still emerging, we cannot ignore Mississippi’s painful history of lynching and racial violence against African Americans.”

Black unemployment continues to surge

Since President Donald Trump took office in January, the Black unemployment rate has hit record highs since October 2021, according to the Associated Press.

In the last three months, the unemployment rate for Black Americans has gone up by 1.5% to 7.5%—twice that of the rate for white Americans—according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Bloomberg calls this “a rare development outside of recessions.” Researchers have attributed the spike to a slower labor market affecting Black employees first, as well as the president’s efforts to shrink the federal workforce.

Reports of the more than 319,000 Black women who’ve become unemployed at the top of the year became an early indicator of the overall economic decline of Black communities. Their unemployment rate spiked from 5.1% in March to 6.7% in August.

“The most vulnerable people tend to get laid off first, and unfortunately, that tends to be Black Americans, and that’s something that is very disturbing in and of itself,” Diane Swonk, chief economist at accounting firm KPMG US, told CNN.

Experts note that these numbers can indicate looming economic troubles for the entire country. Employers added an average of 29,000 jobs each month over the past three months. That’s a drastic decline from the 209,000 average over the same time period in 2024, Bloomberg reports.

White House spokeswoman Taylor Rogers told the outlet that Trump predicts that recent tax cuts and immigrant deportations will add jobs for Black Americans.

“President Trump is implementing the same America First economic agenda that delivered historic job and wage growth — including record-low Black unemployment rates — in his first term,” she said. “The passage of the Working Families Tax Cuts will unleash economic growth through tax reform, deregulation, and incentives for job creation in the private sector that will benefit all Americans.”

Alexsis Rodgers, political director at the Black to the Future Action Fund, told the AP that this is a “new era.”

“There are people who obviously believed his promises, that Trump was going to do something about the cost of eggs, the cost of housing,” she said. “They’ve seen the focus instead is on ICE raids and downsizing the government.”

The DOJ quietly removed a study showing that right-wing extremists have the biggest hand in domestic terrorism

The Department of Justice recently removed a study from its website showing that far-right extremists have killed more Americans than any other domestic terrorist group, according to The Hill.

The study, titled ​​What NIJ Research Tells Us About Domestic Terrorism, stated that “​​the number of far-right attacks continues to outpace all other types of terrorism and domestic violent extremism.” Jason Paladino first reported that the study had been scrubbed from the National Institute for Justice’s online library on Sept. 12.

The removal occurred just days after Charlie Kirk’s assassination at Utah Valley University on Sept. 10. In the wake of his death, Trump said, “The radical left causes tremendous violence,” he said, claiming “they seem to do it in a bigger way” than groups on the right.

However, there has been little evidence to suggest that Tyler Robinson, the 22-year-old lead suspect in Kirk’s killing, identifies as a leftist or that his actions were motivated by political ideology. There’s more of an indication that Robinson and Kirk had been among similar circles of internet culture, according to The New Yorker.

The study, which can still be accessed via the Wayback Machine, used data from the National Institute of Justice. It found that far-right extremists “committed far more ideologically motivated homicides than far-left or radical Islamist extremists, including 227 events that took more than 520 lives.” The authors also state, “In this same period, far-left extremists committed 42 ideologically motivated attacks that took 78 lives.”

Similarly, ContrabandCamp’s Michael Harriot showed that political violence is much more likely to come from the right than the left.

The NIJ study points directly to online chat forums as a source that reinforces their beliefs on gun rights, conspiracy theories, hate-based views and more. “Users grew more ideological and radical as other users reinforced their ideas and connected their ideas to those from other forums,” the study reads.

ICYMI

I Learn More From “Them” Every Time I Take a Little Time To Browse There-

Leslie Feinberg Changed Transmasc History. Here Are 7 of Hir Quotes to Live By

From Stone Butch Blues to Drag King Dreams, Feinberg left a lasting imprint on the trans liberation movement.

By Quispe López August 29, 2025

“Remember me as a revolutionary communist” were beloved author, labor organizer, and trans liberation fighter Leslie Feinberg’s final words on November 15, 2014.

Best known for hir seminal 1993 novel Stone Butch Blues, Leslie Feinberg forever changed the way we thought about transgender life in the United States. In the semi-autobiographical work, readers follow Jess Goldberg, a working class Jewish butch lesbian, as they navigate the hardships of being gender-nonconforming in a transphobic world, transition, passing, and trying to find queer community through it all. It is a novel so attuned to transmasculine experience that Stone Butch Blues to this day remains a shorthand and point of connection for many trans men, nonbinary people, and trans lesbians broadly.

That’s because Feinberg saw writing as a tool to break down the rigidity of previous understandings of transition. Instead, zie pushed for an expansive view of the term “transgender” — one that left space for the “gender outlaws” of the world who have existed beyond binary Western conceptions of gender since the beginning of time.

To say Feinberg permanently altered the fabric of the trans liberation movement would be an understatement. But to understand hir legacy and work, you need to know who zie was in life. Born September 1, 1949 and raised in Buffalo, New York, Feinberg grew up in a working-class Jewish family and was employed in factories at a young age. It’s through hir labor organizing alongside other butch lesbians and transmasculine people of the time that Feinberg became connected to broader liberation movements like Palestinian solidarity, the anti-racist movement, and transgender rights.

Feinberg’s work underscored the complexity of gender for many trans people, and zie didn’t shy away from trying to get cis people to understand. Following the breakout success of Stone Butch Blues, Feinberg went on to be one of the most visible trans organizers of the 1990s, appearing on popular television programs like The Joan Rivers Show to speak about realities of trans life. Zie went on to write several books on trans life and liberation, such as Drag King DreamsTransgender Warriors: Making History From Joan of Arc to Dennis Rodman, and Trans Liberation: Beyond Pink or Blue. As a proud member of the Workers of the World Party, Feinberg emphasized how our struggles for freedom — whether it be gender, race, or class — are all intrinsically linked. Hir legacy insists that in order to free ourselves, we must understand that we are all fighting forms of injustice attached to the same chimera of oppression.

As we celebrate Feinberg’s birthday and Labor Day on September 1, it is a natural time to reflect on hir legacy, work, and contributions to trans people’s collective liberation. Below, we’ve compiled a non-comprehensive list of salient quotes from speeches, books, and articles Feinberg crafted during hir life.

If you don’t name an oppression, you can’t fight it, you can’t organize around it. We want our own voices to be heard.” — The Joan Rivers Show

A 1993 episode of The Joan Rivers Show about trans people featured Leslie Feinberg alongside famed playwright Kate Bornstein and actor David Harrison. Rivers interviewed each of her guests on their experiences with gender, often asking invasive questions about “the surgery” and what people put down on forms and identity documents. But Feinberg took it as the ultimate opportunity to humanize trans people on national television, cutting through the sensationalizing to share the realities of life outside the Western gender binary. Feinberg even went so far as to point out the existence of gender variant people in cultures all over the world prior to colonization, such as Two-Spirit people — a radical thought for the daytime television audience of the 1990s.

“Understanding the amount of persecution and harassment we have in this society is gonna strengthen the fights from affirmative action to pay equity for all of us,” zie said.

Even when Rivers facetiously dug in with questions about why Feinberg didn’t conform to one gender or another, zie flipped the question and asked why the system existed at all. Rather than spouting off theory, Feinberg made the contradiction tangible by speaking on hir own lived experiences as a nonbinary butch. The whole episode is worth viewing in full.

“But very quickly I discovered that passing didn’t just mean slipping below the surface, it meant being buried alive.” — Stone Butch Blues

Feinberg’s seminal novel wasn’t just a reflection on being a trans in a transphobic society; the semi-biographical work offered a nuanced portrayal of the intersection of butch identity and nonbinary transness. Jess Goldberg, Stone Butch Blues’ protagonist, is forced to pass as a man for safety due to the dangers of being an openly gender non-conforming person in the 1950s and ’60s. But Jess is left feeling entirely isolated . A departure from the “born in the wrong body” narrative of transness, Feinberg instead paints a picture of being forced into a box for safety — and the subsequent loss of community that going stealth can present.

“I was still me on the inside, trapped in there with all my wounds and fears. But I was no longer me on the outside,” Jess reflects in the novel.

“I’m not saying we’ll live to see some sort of paradise. But just fighting for change makes you stronger. Not hoping for anything will kill you for sure.” — Stone Butch Blues

While Stone Butch Blues grapples with heavy themes like the loss of community, transphobia, and social isolation, it ends on a note of hope for our protagonist. In addition to highlighting the harsh realities of being trans, Feinberg always stood steadfast in our need to find strength in each other in the face of it. At the nadir of their isolation after moving to New York City, Jess meets Ruth, a trans woman who reminds them that the only way to survive in the face of transphobia is to rely on each other.

“As I look at them, each one, they are so beautiful and so strong they seem larger than life to me. But they’re not. They are real people. Flawed, like me. No heroic proportions. Just human.” — Drag King Dreams

Another work of fiction, Feinberg’s 2006 political novel Drag King Dreams follows Max Rabinowitz, a trans man who is suddenly catapulted back into social justice spaces by a tragedy after losing his joy for organizing.

The novel often invokes real-life trans figures such as Marsha P. Johnson to shore up its core thesis that all of our struggles for liberation are delicately interconnected. We might all be flawed, and it can be hard to work together at times, but when it counts, we need to put aside our differences and fight. At the culmination of the novel, Max realizes that you don’t need to be perfect to be a good comrade and make a difference.

“Maybe this is what legends are made of — real lives lifted up in retrospect to mythic proportions,” Feinberg writes.

“One banner particularly haunted me: it read ‘Stop the War Against Black America,’ which made me realize it wasn’t just distant wars that needed opposing.” — Transgender Warriors: Making History From Joan of Arc to Dennis Rodman

Feinberg always emphasized the interconnected nature of all forms of oppression in hir work. Zie underwood that, rather than fighting in individual silos, it’s imperative to understand the ways that suppressive societal forces work in tandem. In hir 1996 historical reflection on transness, Transgender Warriors: Making History From Joan of Arc to Dennis RodmanFeinberg speaks about an experience they had at a protest for Palestinian liberation that opened their eyes to the symbiotic relationship between white supremacy, colonialism both abroad and domestically, and trans liberation.

“When our lives are suppressed, everyone is denied an understanding of the rich diversity of sex and gender expression and experience that exist in human society.” — Transgender Warriors: Making History From Joan of Arc to Dennis Rodman

By outlining the history of gender variance all over the world, Feinberg reminds readers that trans people are nothing new; we have always been here. Often, we were even revered.

“We have not always been forced to pass, to go underground, in order to work and live. We have a right to live openly and proudly,” Feinberg writes.

“No one’s sex reassignment or fluidity of gender threatens your right to self-identify and self-expression. On the contrary, our struggle bolsters your right to your identity. My right to be me is tied with a thousand threads to your right to be you.” — Trans Liberation: Beyond Pink or Blue

In this collection of speeches published in 1998, Feinberg reminds us that trans liberation has always been connected to the fight for cisgender gay, lesbian, and bisexual rights. Historically, and even to date, trans people have faced pushback from some cisgender people in the community who believe that the fight for trans rights will invalidate their own struggles. A constant advocate for solidarity between movements, Feinberg always asserted that without trans rights, there would be no gay rights.