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Andrade Unimpressed With DeSantis’ Medicaid Fraud Effort

Medicaid Fraud

Andrade: DeSantis Medicaid Initiative Is Cover, Not Cure

The state lawmaker who knows Medicaid better than anyone in the Florida House calls the governor’s new anti-fraud push a legacy cleanup act. He says the real damage runs into the billions.


Gov. Ron DeSantis announced a sweeping Medicaid integrity initiative last week, promising enhanced provider screening, advanced fraud detection technology, and a statewide revalidation of all active Medicaid providers. But the legislator who has spent two years chairing the Florida House Health Care Budget Subcommittee isn’t buying it.

State Rep. Alex Andrade (R-District 2) joined Rick’s Blog Live this week to offer a blunt assessment: the announcement is more about protecting the governor’s legacy than protecting taxpayers.

“I think this is more about trying to provide cover for future legacy reviews than anything else. Once you pull up the hood on the car that was the DeSantis administration, there’s been fraud in SNAP and Medicaid into the billions of dollars for the past several years.”
— Rep. Alex Andrade


Behavioral Analysis: A Case Study in Mismanagement

Andrade walked through one of the most damaging examples: the transfer of behavioral analysis services—care for people with autism, mental health conditions, and other disabilities—into Florida’s managed care system in February 2025.

The fraud trajectory heading into the transition was already alarming:

The move to managed care was supposed to bring those numbers down. Instead, Andrade says, AHCA actively blocked the managed care companies from doing their jobs.

The result? Andrade says he’s been told that managed care plans were told to avoid generating any complaints to legislators until Secretary Shevaun Harris was confirmed, creating an extended period in which fraud went unchecked by design.

Behavioral analysis costs are now estimated at $2.3 billion—an increase of roughly $600 million from the year before managed care took over.

“Solely due to the management decisions of Governor DeSantis’ administration.”
— Rep. Alex Andrade


SNAP: Florida Is Near the Bottom of the Country

The managed care debacle is not an isolated case. Andrade pointed to Florida’s SNAP program—commonly known as food stamps—as another measure of executive neglect.

Florida receives roughly $6 billion annually in federal SNAP funds. The state’s only financial obligation is administering the program. But under DeSantis, Florida’s error rate—the percentage of payments going to ineligible recipients—has ballooned.

The timing is not lost on Andrade. “I think there is somewhat of a correlation between when Governor DeSantis started thinking of himself as a national figure and stopped caring about doing the day-to-day job of being governor.”

And there’s a price tag coming. Under the Trump administration’s reconciliation legislation, states with error rates above 10 percent will be required to cover more than 15 percent of their own SNAP costs.

“We as a state could have to come up with a billion dollars next year in general revenue for the first time ever just to pay out the existing SNAP benefits that people are already receiving.”
— Rep. Alex Andrade


Hope Florida: The Facts Are Established

No conversation about Medicaid fraud in Florida is complete without discussing the Hope Florida Foundation, and Andrade was direct about what he believes happened.

Andrade on Hope Florida: “James Uthmeyer stole $10 million in Medicaid funds from Florida taxpayers and funneled them to his own PAC and then funneled them from his own PAC to Evan Power at RPOF. I can say definitively that the Hope Florida Foundation still has not filed their 990 to tell the IRS what they did with that $10 million of Medicaid money.”

He also noted that the state admitted the funds were Medicaid dollars by paying $6 million back to the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

The grand jury report on Hope Florida has been withheld. Attorney General James Uthmeyer—who Andrade says is at the center of the diversion—is now running for re-election.


What Would Actually Help?

Andrade is terming out of the legislature and won’t be in the chair when the next administration takes over. But he offered a prescription for what meaningful Medicaid oversight actually requires.

As a point of contrast, Andrade repeatedly invoked Rick Scott. “We did not have this problem when Rick Scott was governor, love him or hate him. He was an incredible executive.”


 

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