Indiana
Indiana's $1.2B universal vouchers start July 2026. An abortion drug ban is advancing. 560K face Medicaid work requirements.
Latest: June 30, 2026 Latest BriefIndiana Tops Medicaid Kid LossesJune 30, 2026Governor Mike Braun signed nine executive orders in his first days in office, including one directing state agencies to ensure abortion laws are “fully and faithfully executed.” Republicans hold supermajorities in both chambers. Indiana was the first state to pass a new abortion ban after Dobbs. It is now spending $1.2 billion per biennium on vouchers while libraries lose $18.6 million and the state faces a $2.4 billion revenue shortfall.
School vouchers
The 2025-2027 budget removed all income requirements for the Indiana Choice Scholarship Program starting July 2026, making vouchers universal. The state spent $497 million in 2024-25 on over 76,000 private school students. The new biennium earmarks $1.2 billion, with an estimated $190 million in additional expansion costs.
$1.2 billion earmarked for private school vouchers in 2025-2027 — while public libraries lost $18.6 million and public colleges face a 5% state funding cut
Braun said vouchers are “not a zero-sum game” and that the state can fund teacher pay increases by “redirecting funding away from items such as physical buildings.” Library leaders disagree.
”This is the kind of cut that we can’t even pay our bills.”
Cheryl Dobbs, Greenwood Public Library Executive Director, on Senate Enrolled Act 1 library funding cutsReproductive rights
Indiana became the first state to enact a new abortion ban after Dobbs, signing it on August 5, 2022. The near-total ban permits abortion only to prevent death or serious health risk, in cases of lethal fetal anomaly, or for rape or incest within the first 10 weeks.
On March 5, 2026, Marion County Superior Court granted a permanent injunction ruling that Indiana cannot enforce the ban against plaintiffs when doing so would substantially burden their religious exercise under the state’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA). The AG appealed the next day.
Senate Bill 236 would ban prescribing, distributing, or possessing abortion-inducing drugs in Indiana, with limited exceptions.
If the RFRA ruling survives appeal
- Patients whose religious beliefs support bodily autonomy gain a legal path to care
- Indiana becomes a test case for religious freedom as a tool to challenge abortion bans
- Other states with RFRA laws see similar challenges filed
If the state wins on appeal
- The near-total ban applies to everyone regardless of religious belief
- SB 236 could add criminal penalties for abortion medication on top of the procedure ban
- Indiana patients continue traveling to Illinois, Michigan, or Ohio for care
Healthcare and benefits
Senate Bill 1 added work requirements for Healthy Indiana Plan (Medicaid) enrollees: 80 hours per month of work, education, or volunteering. The state wanted to enforce starting July 2025, but the federal timeline pushes it to January 2027. FSSA is hiring 400 eligibility checkers to verify compliance for 560,000 enrollees. As of April 2026, 50 have been onboarded.
SB 1 also lowered SNAP asset limits starting July 2026, kicking approximately 3,000 households off SNAP and saving the state about $635,000 over two years.
Who This Affects
A warehouse worker in Marion County, Indianapolis, Indiana
He works 35-hour weeks at a distribution center. His employer does not offer insurance. He qualifies for the Healthy Indiana Plan. Under the new work requirements, his hours are 5 short of the 80-hour monthly threshold in months with fewer workdays. He risks losing coverage over a scheduling gap, not because he stopped working.
Based on documented cases and public data.
Indiana will also end its HIV testing and support program on June 30, 2026, after federal pandemic relief dollars dried up.
Federal cuts
Indiana lawmakers learned they need to build the next biennial budget with $2.4 billion less than projected. That shortfall is landing on libraries, colleges, and public health.
| Cut | Amount | What it funds |
|---|---|---|
| Public libraries | $18.6M (2026), $24.2M (2028) | Hours, staff, services |
| Public colleges | 5% state funding cut | Tuition, programs, research |
| Indiana Humanities | $800K (FY25), $1.3M (FY26) | NEH grants, cultural programs |
| HIV program | Full program sunset June 2026 | Testing, counseling, support |
Hundreds rallied at the Statehouse against SB 1’s impacts on education and libraries.
2026 elections
Indiana’s next governor’s race is not until 2028. But all 100 House seats and half the Senate are on the November 3 ballot. The supermajority that overrides every veto, funds vouchers at $1.2 billion, and cuts libraries is the one voters can change.
Protect yourself right now
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Check your voter registration. All 100 House seats are on the ballot November 3. Verify at indianavoters.in.gov.
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Verify your Medicaid status. Work requirement tracking starts before enforcement in 2027. If you are on the Healthy Indiana Plan, keep your contact information current with FSSA.
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Ask candidates about the $1.2 billion. Your state representative voted to spend $1.2 billion on vouchers while cutting libraries by $18.6 million. Ask them to explain the tradeoff. Find your legislator at iga.in.gov.
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Track SB 236. The abortion drug ban passed the Senate. Ask your House representative where they stand.
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Support your library. If library hours or services have been cut in your community, attend the board meeting and ask what the state cut means for your branch.
Show Up Locally
Hendricks County Dems at the Brownsburg Lions Club 4th of July Parade
Community Event · Hendricks County Democratic Party
S Odell St, Brownsburg, IN, 46112
Walk or ride with the HCDP at the Brownsburg Lions Club 4th of July Parade! We’re hitting the streets , and we want YOU to join our krewe! Show your democratic pride, have a blast with fellow.
Stop ICE-No Kings-Hands Off-Rally for Democracy
Indivisible NWI
SE Corner of U.S. 41 and Ridge Road, Highland, IN, 46322
We rally every Saturday, 12-1. We’ve partnered with veterans groups to fight for democracy and all our rights every week. We’ll be in Highland on the SE corner of Ridge and 41 at the Highway of Flags.
Dyer Dems Coffee Social
Community Event · Indiana Lake County Democratic Party
This event’s address is private. Sign up for more details, Dyer, IN, 46311
Join us for an informal coffee social every Sunday at 9 a.m. You don't need to be from Dyer to attend. All Dems are welcome. Meet likeminded people and find out how you can get involved.
Schererville Coffee with Dems
Community Event · Indiana Lake County Democratic Party
2206 US-41, Schererville, IN, 46375
Join the Schererville Dems for coffee the second Saturday of every month at 9 a.m.
Common Grounds - Saturday Coffee and Conversation
Community Event · Indivisible Central Indiana
5015 E 56th Street, Indianapolis, IN, 46226
Join us for a chill morning of coffee and conversation! Get info about plugging into your community. Bring a friend and get involved!
Popsicles in the Park | Carmel Dems Social
Community Event · Hamilton County Democratic Party (IN)
2700 W 116th St, Carmel, IN, 46032
Join us at West Park for a family-friendly social event.
Munster Democrats Drinks with Dems
Community Event · Indiana Lake County Democratic Party
This event’s address is private. Sign up for more details, Munster, IN, 46321
Grab a drink with some Dems and find out what is happening in Munster.
Crown Point Dems - Coffee and Conversation
Community Event · Indiana Lake County Democratic Party
This event’s address is private. Sign up for more details, Crown Point, IN, 46307
Join us for an informal coffee social every third Saturday at 9 a.m. You don't need to be from Crown Point to attend. All Dems are welcome. Meet likeminded people and find out how you can get.
What Changed Recently
Indiana Lost 174,000 Kids From Medicaid. It's the Worst Rate in the Nation.
Indiana shed 174,000 children from Medicaid between January and April 2025, a 20% drop that leads every other state, according to a Georgetown University
Arkansas Proved Medicaid Work Requirements Don't Work. Congress Made Them National Law Anyway.
5.2 million adults will lose Medicaid by 2034 under new federal work requirements. Nebraska is already enforcing them. Here's what you can do.
Reproductive Rights Are Under Coordinated Federal and State Attack. Here Is Where Things Stand.
Abortion access is under coordinated federal and state attack. Planned Parenthood lost Medicaid funding. Title X is in limbo.
Indiana's FAIRNESS Act Takes Effect July 1. Every Local Agency Must Honor ICE Detainers.
Indiana's FAIRNESS Act requires all local law enforcement to honor ICE detainer requests, bans sanctuary policies statewide, and expands the Attorney General's power to investigate employers. It takes effect July 1.
Trump Pardoned a Congressman Convicted of Insider Trading. Steve Buyer Made $354,027 on Illegal Stock Trades.
Former Rep. Steve Buyer (R-IN) was convicted on four counts of securities fraud for trading on confidential T-Mobile/Sprint merger information. He was sentenced to 22 months. Trump issued a full pardon.
Red States Are Turning Social Workers Into Immigration Agents
Indiana, Utah, Wyoming, and Tennessee now force social service workers to verify immigration status and report families to federal authorities.
Voter Registration and Resources
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