Note: Free xpostfactoid subscription is available on Substack alone, though I will continue to cross-post on this site. If you're not subscribed, please visit xpostfactoid on Substack and sign up.
![]() |
| Your income next year may be $14,000? Can you earn a little more? |
1. Blase rhetorically conflates what he’s branded as “the great Obamacare fraud” with enrollments he deems “improper” — that is, enrollments that may show some evidence that the applicant’s estimate of next-year income has been optimized to maximize subsidies. That segue is parroted by CMS in last week’s ASPE brief:
Enrollment that is improper or fraudulent is enrollment by individuals misstating their income to gain access to free plans. Phantom enrollees are unknowingly enrolled in free plans by brokers or auto enrolled. By our estimate, improper, phantom and fraudulent enrollment peaked at 5.6 million people in 2025.
2. The allegations of outright fraud — “phantom” enrollees signed up by brokers, who have no knowledge of their enrollment or no intent to use it— are chiefly based on an analysis of CMS data on ‘enrollees without claims’ (EWOC). This analysis, which ignores the high incidence of short-term enrollment in HealthCare.gov states, driven by year-round enrollment and by the Medicaid unwinding of 2023-2024 — has been effectively rebutted by Matt Fiedler (1, 2) and others. While broker fraud may have given some boost to EWOC, true “phantom” enrollments are small percentage of the enrollments branded as “improper.” As last week’s ASPE brief notes, “In 2025, CMS canceled coverage for 250,000 people enrolled without consent and identified 200,000 unauthorized plan switches.”






.png)

