We recently gathered a group of attorneys from across Reed Smith to provide an overview of key changes we expect to see within the regulatory landscape following the U.S. presidential election. If you missed the webinar, you can access the recording on demand.
Please see the summary of our top takeaways below and look out for an invite to the next installment of our quarterly Investigations and enforcement trends webinar series – we hope you can join us!
Health care
- Despite success in ballot initiatives in numerous states protecting reproductive rights, the new Trump administration is likely to implement restrictions on abortion medication, which will limit abortion access on a nationwide basis. However, we consider it unlikely that an explicit legislative federal abortion ban will be implemented because of shifting political strategies and campaign promises.
- The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) will likely face a brain drain under health secretary Kennedy and we expect regulatory direction on numerous gender-affirming care and LGBTQ+ rights will be reversed. It is likely that a new Congress will use the power of the purse to legislate against gender-affirming care and coverage for abortion travel for the military. Legislation is expected to make the Hyde Amendment permanent.
- It is unlikely that there are sufficient votes to repeal the Affordable Care Act, but we expect legislation to change risk pools and otherwise present reforms. We anticipate legislation on pharmacy benefit management and possibly a re-evaluation of Medicare Advantage features – two areas with some bipartisan support.