>
How American Life Expectancy Compares To Its Peers
Panama City Approves Bitcoin And Crypto Payments for Taxes, Fees, & Permits
Conor McGregor's Presidential Bid, Tariffs, Erasing Irish Culture, and Deporting Rosie O'Don
Scientists reach pivotal breakthrough in quest for limitless energy:
Kawasaki CORLEO Walks Like a Robot, Rides Like a Bike!
World's Smallest Pacemaker is Made for Newborns, Activated by Light, and Requires No Surgery
Barrel-rotor flying car prototype begins flight testing
Coin-sized nuclear 3V battery with 50-year lifespan enters mass production
BREAKTHROUGH Testing Soon for Starship's Point-to-Point Flights: The Future of Transportation
Molten salt test loop to advance next-gen nuclear reactors
Quantum Teleportation Achieved Over Internet For The First Time
Watch the Jetson Personal Air Vehicle take flight, then order your own
Microneedles extract harmful cells, deliver drugs into chronic wounds
Far-left California Governor Gavin Newsom has to face the reality of the burden illegals place on services and the staggering cost behind the decision to prioritize illegals over citizens.
On Monday, Newson signed a $2.8 billion bailout to address the untenable deficit in California's Medicaid program.
The deficit is the result of last year's decision to expand the program to include illegals.
The move, confirmed by Newsom's office to Fox News Digital Monday afternoon, comes after the Democratic governor asked lawmakers last month for a $3.4 billion loan from the state's general fund to cover some $6.2 billion in outstanding costs for Medi-Cal, one of the state's primary healthcare programs that takes both federal and state taxpayer dollars. The additional funds will help keep the program running through June for some 15 million Californians, including noncitizens.
According to state data, roughly 1.6 million illegal immigrants are currently enrolled in Medi-Cal, part of the program's total 15 million enrollees. The state had initially projected the expansion would cost just under $6 billion for fiscal year 2024–2025. But just one year in, the costs have surged far past that estimate.
Newsom's latest budget proposal now puts the cost of covering illegal immigrants at $8.4 billion for 2024–2025, and $7.4 billion the following year.
California Republican state Senate Minority Leader Brian Jones weighed in saying, "Just now, Senate Democrats rubber-stamped another $3 BILLION for Newsom's free healthcare for illegal immigrants—on top of the $9.5 billion already spent."
"Meanwhile, healthcare access is plummeting. Wait times are growing. Democrats have made their choice: legal residents come second."
"We must stop new enrollments of illegal immigrants and rein in this unsustainable program before it collapses entirely. #FixCalifornia."