While campaigning to become the state鈥檚 75th governor in 2016, Roy Cooper said he wanted to help low-income North Carolinians who had been forced to forgo basic medical care because they could not afford health insurance.
He finally achieved that goal six years later when North Carolina expanded Medicaid. The decade-in-the-making measure loosened the program鈥檚 strict eligibility requirements, making hundreds of thousands of low-income residents eligible for coverage for the first time.
鈥淲hen I ran for governor, one of my top priorities was creating a North Carolina where people were healthier and could get the care that they need to have lives of purpose and abundance,鈥 Cooper said in an exclusive interview with NC Health 瓜神app. 鈥淲e knew that Medicaid expansion was an important way of making that happen because there were a lot of hardworking people in North Carolina who were making too much money to qualify for Medicaid, but not enough money to qualify for subsidies under the Affordable Care Act.鈥
Expansion arguably now stands as Cooper鈥檚 signature achievement. More than 590,300 people who were previously ineligible for Medicaid have since expansion took effect in December 2023, nearly surpassing the state鈥檚 projected enrollment for two years in just 12 months.
鈥淚t's exciting that we set the goal of having 600,000 people enroll during the first two years, and now we're almost at that goal in just one year,鈥 Cooper said. 鈥淚 think it shows that people really needed it, and I'm grateful that we were able to get that for the people of North Carolina.鈥
But expansion was by no means easy for Cooper. He faced multiple setbacks over his two-term effort to make the measure a reality.
Power in numbers
Cooper said he knew from the beginning that expansion would be an "uphill battle."
The Affordable Care Act, former President Barack Obama鈥檚 trademark health care policy, allowed states to enlarge the pool of people eligible for Medicaid, which is largely funded by the federal government, by raising the maximum-allowed income for the program. The Obama administration incentivized states to adjust their income thresholds by offering to cover 90 percent of the cost of insuring the newly eligible beneficiaries.
But the contentious nature of the Affordable Care Act drove North Carolina鈥檚 Republican-led General Assembly to requiring legislative approval to expand Medicaid in the state.
Shortly after taking office in January 2017, Cooper asked the feds to override that law and implement expansion without the state legislature鈥檚 blessing. His request was met with a lawsuit from Senate leader Phil Berger (R-Eden) and House Speaker Tim Moore (R-Kings Mountain), with the court ultimately ruling in the Republicans鈥 favor.
鈥淚 think the biggest hurdle we faced was that Medicaid expansion was part of 鈥極bamacare,鈥 and that made this an extremely political issue for Republicans,鈥 Cooper said, adding that Donald Trump, who was elected the same year Cooper was, spent much of his first term as president working to dismantle the program colloquially named after his predecessor. 鈥淲e had the challenge of moving Medicaid expansion past the politics of 鈥極bamacare,鈥 and the way we needed to do that was get the constituents of Republican legislators to ask them for it.鈥
Cooper said his administration managed to 鈥渙vercome the political headwinds鈥 by building a broad coalition of advocates who could persuasively argue the value of expansion to Republican lawmakers. He also had some help from who proposed a series of bills in support of expansion.
鈥淲e had very brave people who had become victims of the medical system, who were working hard for a living but couldn't afford health insurance and therefore were struggling to pay medical bills, who were willing to go and tell their stories,鈥 Cooper said. 鈥淲e also were able to get who knew that many of the people sitting in their jails needed health care and not handcuffs [鈥 .] A lot of people with substance use disorders and mental illness were requiring a lot of attention from their deputies and officers.鈥
Rural support
The chorus of voices supporting expansion grew to include chambers of commerce in rural communities, , where many small business owners could not afford to provide health insurance to their employees. County commissioners in rural areas also warmed to the measure after realizing it could help local hospitals that were at risk of going under.
鈥淢any of these hospitals just simply were treating too many patients who didn't have health insurance,鈥 Cooper said. Local elected officials 鈥渞ecognized that Medicaid expansion would allow a lot of the people who live in their county to get health insurance to help keep these rural hospitals from closing.鈥
By 2023, the chorus had become hard to ignore. Legislation making North Carolina the 40th state to approve expansion with bipartisan support, a reversal spurred in part by the promise of more than $1.6 billion in federal financial incentives.
The move paved the way for newly eligible residents to after a over the state budget.
鈥淔inally, we were able to able to get enough pressure on Republican legislators and, to their credit, they ended up putting it in the budget at the end of the day and we were able to sign it,鈥 said Cooper, who was flanked by several of the advocates who had championed expansion 鈥 along with some of his longtime legislative opponents 鈥 when he signed the measure into law during an event in Raleigh. 鈥淚t was an important day for North Carolina, and this coalition of people all together helped get the job done.鈥
鈥楶olitical will鈥櫬
Kody Kinsley, secretary of the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services, believes expansion wouldn鈥檛 have passed if not for the governor鈥檚 鈥渦nrelenting tenacity.鈥
鈥淗e went out chamber by chamber, business by business, sheriff by sheriff, to get them to see what Medicaid expansion meant for them,鈥 said Kinsley, who took charge of NC DHHS, which oversees the state鈥檚 Medicaid program, in 2021. 鈥淗e was building up that coalition of people so that, all of a sudden, it would be hard to find anyone that was against it.鈥
Cooper鈥檚 鈥減olitical will,鈥 he added, is what 鈥渃reated the fundamentals for the legislative change to happen.鈥
鈥淚鈥檝e met plenty of other people who, after losing a fight so many times over six years, would have just walked away,鈥 Kinsley said. 鈥淗e did not, which is why we're the only state in the Southeast that has gotten this done through the legislature in the way that we did it in a long time.鈥
North Carolina was the first state to adopt expansion through a legislative process since 2019. A handful of other states have expanded Medicaid through executive orders and ballot measures.
Mandy Cohen, currently director of the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, served as secretary of NC DHHS before Kinsley. She worked closely with Cooper during his first term in office to lay the groundwork for expansion.
鈥淲hen I was interviewing for the job, he had articulated it was a priority of his, so that was something from Day One that was on his mind and on his priority list,鈥 she said in a phone interview. 鈥淏ut he also knew that there was work we needed to do at the department, with the legislature and across the state in order to set the table and make the conditions possible for that to happen.鈥
Throughout various setbacks and roadblocks, Cohen said Cooper remained 鈥渟teadfast to his mission鈥 to make North Carolina a healthier place to live.
鈥淚 think the biggest thing I learned from working for him is that progress is not necessarily a straight line from A to B,鈥 she said. 鈥淧rogress happens when you sustain an effort and keep focused on priorities. You build coalitions and relationships, and you do good work and show that we can solve hard problems together if you bring folks to the table.鈥
Another takeaway from her work with Cooper, she said, was the Nash County native's unwavering devotion to his home state.
鈥淚鈥檝e never met anyone on the planet that loves North Carolina more than Governor Cooper,鈥 Cohen said. 鈥淗e really embodies that in every, every way. It just was always his North Star 鈥 his love for the state, his mission.鈥
Throwing a lifeline聽
Medicaid expansion is far from Cooper鈥檚 only health care achievement.
Under his leadership, North Carolina launched a first-in-the-nation program that uses Medicaid dollars to address non-medical factors that affect health such as housing, food and transportation. The program was part of a so-called transformation that changed Medicaid from a traditional state-run, fee-for-service program to one run by national insurers 鈥 a policy shift that Republican legislative leaders insisted on before even considering expansion.
But expansion is unquestionably Cooper鈥檚 most impactful health policy success. It provided a lifeline to people like Henry Medlin, a Beaufort County resident who worked in the aviation industry before quitting his job to care for his aging father.
After he resigned, Medlin lost his employer-provided health plan. He had gone without insurance for nearly a decade when he learned that he was eligible for Medicaid expansion while visiting a free clinic earlier this year to get treated for a broken tooth.
鈥淚 didn't believe it, but 10 days later I had a health care insurance card in my mailbox,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 take care of my dad unless I can take care of me, and having Medicaid means I can take care of me.鈥
Medlin traveled to ECU Health Medical Center in Greenville on Wednesday for an event organized by the governor's office to mark the one-year anniversary of expansion. Darcy Brown, who lives with multiple sclerosis and has been unable to work for the past 16 years, also spoke about the measure鈥檚 impact during the event.
In 2018, Brown was in a vehicle accident that left her hospitalized for two months, causing the premium on the health plan she had signed up for through the Affordable Care Act marketplace to increase from $10 a month to $200. She paid the premium using money from her accident until the company that ran the health plan went bankrupt, forcing her to sign up for a different plan with a $700 monthly premium.
Her payout from the accident nearly depleted, Brown was at risk of losing her health insurance by the end of 2023. Fortunately, she was among the first wave of North Carolinians to be automatically enrolled in Medicaid when expansion went live in December of that year.
鈥淢edicaid is literally saving my life,鈥 said Brown, who noted that the program pays for her medical equipment and visits to specialist providers. 鈥淚鈥檇 like to thank Governor Cooper for getting Medicaid expanded to the state of North Carolina. I am the person that benefited from it, and I am no different than all the other people that can benefit.鈥
Cooper鈥檚 future
Some cabinet nominees for President-elect Trump鈥檚 second administration have expressed interest in reducing or eliminating federal funding for Medicaid. There have also been calls to force participants to work for their benefits.
Cooper believes Medicaid is too 鈥渋ngrained鈥 in the nation鈥檚 health care system to be completely eradicated. He is, however, concerned that Trump will restart his 鈥渁ttempt to get rid of the Affordable Care Act,鈥 which would put expansion in jeopardy.
鈥淚 think it is going to be important for the people who have this coverage to continue to plead with their members of Congress and members of the U.S. Senate to keep it in place, because Republicans have no replacement for it,鈥 Cooper said. 鈥淭hey have continued to talk about studying options and reviewing options, but they have no option to replace it with.鈥
The 67-year-old said he will continue to advocate for health care issues after leaving the executive mansion. He is especially passionate, he said, about increasing preventive services for substance use disorder and expanding treatment for mental and behavioral health.
He also plans to support advocacy efforts in states that have yet to expand access to Medicaid. The holdouts include Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Wisconsin and Wyoming.
鈥淭here are millions of people living in those 10 states that could significantly benefit from Medicaid expansion dollars [going] into their states, and I look forward to talking to more advocates and elected officials in those other states to help them to form these coalitions of people that we know are out there,鈥 Cooper said. 鈥淭he key is just to channel the positive political force that you already have in these states into effective legislation.鈥
This first appeared on and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
North Carolina Health 瓜神app is an independent, non-partisan, not-for-profit, statewide news organization dedicated to covering all things health care in North Carolina. Visit NCHN at northcarolinahealthnews.org.