California Budget Battle: Cuts, Taxes and Medi‑Cal Stakes
California, USAFri Jun 05 2026
California lawmakers face a tight deadline to draft the next fiscal year’s budget, with big questions about how to fund health programs for millions of low‑income residents. The state must decide whether to keep the current level of Medi‑Cal spending, cut some services, or raise new taxes on businesses and insurance companies.
The governor proposes a $334 billion package that would keep most of the state’s health and social welfare programs, but federal aid has slipped. Because only about 75 % of that money comes from the U. S. government, any reduction in federal support forces the state to trim services or find new revenue.
Supporters of Medi‑Cal have pushed back, warning that the governor’s plan could cut essential care for 15 million Californians who qualify. In response, both the Senate and Assembly have drafted alternative budgets that add several billion dollars to restore or expand services. The exact numbers differ, but the general direction is clearer: more spending on health and welfare.
A key point of contention is how to raise the needed funds. The Senate wants a $285 monthly fee for each employee on Medi‑Cal, while the governor and Assembly favor keeping the existing Managed Care Organization (MCO) tax on health plans. That tax has generated about $4. 5 billion per year and helped the state secure extra federal dollars, but it expires this year.
California voters recently approved a ballot measure that requires any MCO tax revenue to go directly into medical services, not other programs. The industry group representing health plans argues that renewing the tax would violate this measure and raise costs for patients.
Beyond health, lawmakers are wrestling with a long‑term structural deficit that has grown since 2022. The governor claims his budget would eliminate the gap, but many of his proposals rely on temporary fixes such as drawing from emergency reserves or short‑lived tax boosts from the AI sector. Analysts warn that California’s debt and low reserves leave little room for error.
With the June 15 deadline looming, it seems likely that lawmakers will patch holes rather than solve the root causes. The outcome will shape whether California can keep its most vulnerable residents covered while maintaining fiscal responsibility.
https://localnews.ai/article/california-budget-battle-cuts-taxes-and-medical-stakes-fcee7222
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