The bill authorizes emergency funds to keep Californiaโs Medicaid program afloat as costs surge and criticism mounts over illegal immigrant coverage.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed emergency legislation that will close a $2.8 billion shortfall in the stateโs Medicaid program, Medi-Cal, ensuring continued health care coverage through June for approximately 15 million low-income residents, including hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants.
Newsom signed Assembly Bill 100 into law on April 14, according to a statement from his office. The measure is part of a broader response to an estimated $6.2 billion budget gap in Medi-Cal, the stateโs sprawling public health care program.
The shortfall followed Californiaโs expansion of full-scope Medi-Cal benefits to all income-eligible adults in 2024, regardless of immigration statusโa move hailed by progressives and criticized by conservatives.
The Medi-Cal expansionโimplemented in January 2024 under a 2022 lawโmade California the first state in the nation to offer free, comprehensive health care to all low-income adults regardless of immigration status. The state initially projected that the policy would cost $2.7 billion annually and cover about 764,000 residents without lawful immigration status. Actual program costs have exceeded expectations, contributing to Californiaโs budget crisis, according to state officials.
California state Rep. Carl DeMaio, a Republican, has called for an audit of Medi-Cal spending, saying that California cannot afford to provide free health care to illegal immigrants.
โThis puts the health coverage for poor people, children, the neediest among us, at risk,โ DiMaio told reporters, according to a video that he shared on social media. โWhy? Because weโve given away the store to noncitizens. Weโve given illegal immigrants free health care at taxpayersโ expense.โ
Californiaโs Medi-Cal expansion for illegal immigrants costs about $8.4 billion from the state general fund annually, according to an exchange between DeMaio and a California Department of Finance official during a recent budget hearing.
Newsomโs administration has denied claims that the expansion alone caused the shortfall, pointing to a combination of factors, including rising drug costs and larger enrollment by older people. In March, the state Department of Finance approved a $3.44 billion emergency loan from the general fund to temporarily cover Medi-Calโs cost overruns. The $2.8 billion appropriation approved under AB 100 supplements the loan and unlocks federal matching funds to keep the program solvent through June.
Byย Tom Ozimek