A devastating new Health and Human Services (HHS) Inspector General report released on Tuesday reveals that the Obama administration has yet to determine whether 1,295,571 of the over 8 million Obamacare enrollees are U.S. citizens lawfully in the country.
The finding, located on page 11 of the report,
states that 44% of the remaining 2,611,780 application
"inconsistencies" are related to verifying "Citizenship/national
status/lawful presence." Another 960,492 application inconsistencies
were related to verifying whether subsidy applicants provided accurate
income information.
Moreover, the Inspector General report only covered the federal
Obamacare exchanges to determine how the Obama administration resolved
verification problems through December 2013. As for the 15 state-run
Obamacare exchanges, the report says four--Oregon, Nevada, Vermont, and
Massachusetts--are simply "unable to resolve inconsistencies."
As the Washington Post reported
in May, as many as one million Obamacare enrollees may be receiving
incorrect taxpayer-funded subsidies due to Obamacare's continued
technical failures and inability to properly verify income and
citizenship eligibility.
One year ago, conservatives warned that the Obama administration's decision to use the so-called "honor system" for income eligibility was merely a backdoor way to get as many individuals on the public dole as possible.
The Office of Inspector General determined that "the federal
marketplace was generally incapable of resolving most inconsistencies."
Obamacare will cost U.S. taxpayers $2.6 trillion over the next ten years.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario