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Home » News » News » Instead of Cutting Fat from the Budget, Maine Democrats Want State-Funded Weight Loss Drugs
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Instead of Cutting Fat from the Budget, Maine Democrats Want State-Funded Weight Loss Drugs

Seamus OthotBy Seamus OthotFebruary 10, 2025Updated:February 10, 20258 Comments3 Mins Read
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As Maine faces an impending half-billion dollar budget shortfall, and Gov. Janet Mills (D-Maine) considers a flurry of tax increases that would barely dent the deficit, legislative Democrats are aiming to expand welfare benefits to include weight-loss drugs like Ozempic.

[RELATED: The State of the Budget: Bad. Why? Mills…]

Rep. Anne Graham (D-North Yarmouth), along with five Democratic co-sponsors, proposed LD 480, “An Act to Support Healthy Weight by Providing MaineCare Coverage for Certain Weight Loss Medications.”

The bill would allow anyone enrolled in taxpayer-funded MaineCare health benefits to receive subsidies for glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist drugs, such as Ozempic, designed to combat obesity.

The bill imposes almost no limits on the coverage, requiring only that the drug be approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and that the welfare recipient must have a prescription.

Instead of promoting a healthier lifestyle as a means of combating obesity, Rep. Graham and her co-sponsors seem to prefer saddling down taxpayers with the cost of providing weight-loss drugs to welfare recipients.

The bill, set for consideration in the Legislative Committee on Health and Human Services, does not yet have a fiscal note indicating just how much it will cost taxpayers, though it is sure to add to an already overburdened welfare system.

According to Spring 2023 data, approximately 416,000 people were receiving MaineCare benefits, with 106,509 of those recipients only eligible under COVID-19 era temporary expansion enrollment policies.

If those expansion recipients are ruled out, that still leaves an approximate 309,491 enrollees.

Assuming that national weight data holds true for Maine, roughly 40 percent of those recipients would be obese, leaving approximately 123,796 MaineCare recipients who would potentially take Ozempic or some other weight-loss drug.

According to the manufacturer’s website, Ozempic costs $997 per month, meaning that if MaineCare covered the full cost of the drug for all of its obese recipients, it could cost taxpayers a hefty $1.48 billion every year.

Although that number assumes recipients would have no co-pay for the drug and that every obese recipient would take the drug, neither of which are assured, the actual cost would likely still weigh down the state’s deficit in a potentially massive way.

[RELATED: Here Are All the Taxes and Fees Janet Mills’ Budget Would Create and Increase to Fuel Record State Spending…]

Gov. Mills has already proposed numerous tax increases, from increased tobacco taxes to taxes on streaming services, in order to deal with the budget. A significant expansion of MaineCare appears to be at cross-purposes with her efforts.

The Maine Wire reached out to the bill’s sponsor, asking whether she is concerned that her bill goes against the governor’s stated goal of creating a balanced budget, but she did not immediately respond.

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Seamus Othot

Seamus Othot is a reporter for The Maine Wire. He grew up in New Hampshire, and graduated from The Thomas More College of Liberal Arts, where he was able to spend his time reading the great works of Western Civilization. He can be reached at seamus@themainewire.com

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<span class="dsq-postid" data-dsqidentifier="35056 https://www.themainewire.com/?p=35056">8 Comments

  1. beachmom on February 10, 2025 11:14 AM

    Why don’t they just ban junk food from food stamp programs?
    These people are so stupid and wasteful and full of malarkey in everything they do

  2. sandy on February 10, 2025 11:21 AM

    Dependent of the naney state.

  3. Billy B. on February 10, 2025 11:36 AM

    Democrats are trying to destroy our state .
    There can be no other logical explanation .
    We need to vote these idiot democrats out in 2026 .

  4. Benny Weaver on February 10, 2025 11:46 AM

    Janet Mills doesn’t want to reimburse the Maine hospitals , but she wants to buy fat people Ozempic .
    Priceless .
    Keep eating those Oreos Martha ::have another Mac D cheeseburger ….want a Dr. Pepper with that ?
    You can’t make this shit up .
    IMPEACH Janet Mills .

  5. jerome sirois on February 10, 2025 1:12 PM

    Ozempic was not developed for weight loss it was developed to help treat type 2 diabetes.it was “hijacked” for weight loss. I take it for diabetes but have to justify for insurance to cover it do not think use should be subsidized at the same rate for weight loss as for diabetic control

  6. Norman Linnell on February 11, 2025 7:34 AM

    Providing weight loss drugs at Taxpayer expense to people being over fed at Taxpayer expense actually makes sense to Communist Democrats!

  7. Bingo on February 11, 2025 8:07 AM

    Dr.Nass lost her license for prescribing a drug for an illness that it was not “approved” for. She got tag teamed by the Mills sisters who set out to ruin her. Just saying.

  8. SkippyJoeDiaper on February 11, 2025 8:15 AM

    These dems get dumber by the day. How about the fatties cut out the junk, cheap beer, soda, potato chips and cheese doodles. Get off your fat asses and work out, walk, run cycle and any other from the plethora of exercises here in the US.

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