Congress takes up health care again – and impatient voters shouldn’t hold their breath for a cure
As the bell struck midnight on
Following the expiration of these subsidies, health insurance premiums are skyrocketing for around 90% of Americans who use health insurance from the exchange. For many Americans, the new year means a choice between paying exorbitant costs or taking the risk of no health insurance at all.
But unlike other policy challenges that
The extension of health care subsidies was the pivotal disagreement that ultimately led to the longest government shutdown in
The challenge of passing meaningful solutions to rising health care costs is not unique to this year or to this
Why is it so hard for
Like many policy problems, partisanship is partly to blame. But the sprawling complexities of the American health care system pose a particular challenge to members of
The failure of two health care proposals in
Government 'dips its toe'
Americans face some of the highest health care costs in the world. Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have long campaigned on addressing exorbitant costs and equitable access.
Progressive politicians proposed the idea of national health insurance as early as the 1900s, but efforts were limited to women and children, and any policy successes were moderate and temporary.
Following the Great Depression and the advent of
During the 1950s, as Americans began to expect more services from their tax dollars, formal coalitions formed in support of, and in opposition to, government-supported health care. Workers and unions, bolstered by
The tension held until 1956, when the government dipped its toe into federally funded health care, enacting the first "Medicare" government-funded program for dependents of the armed forces.
In the private sector, employee demands and employer tax incentives led to a convoluted web of employer-based insurance programs. But for many Americans, particularly the retired and elderly and those with low-paying jobs, there remained few, if any, insurance options available.
Enter: Medicare and Medicaid
In the 1960s, under Democratic President
This was a watershed moment for policymakers. With health care coverage now under the umbrella of the federal government, domestic policymaking responsibility expanded to match. For lawmakers, this meant not only new debates but also new federal agencies, new congressional committees, new lobbying firms and new interest group coalitions.
An elderly woman shows her gratitude to President
In the decades that followed,
Yet still, the web of private and federal health insurance programs left millions of Americans uninsured. It wasn't until 2010, under President
Why, despite centuries of attention, does health care coverage remain one of – if not the most – perplexing and challenging domestic issues that
Consensus becomes more difficult
Part of this is a uniquely American problem: Like many services, the American health care system is based on economic incentives, and the foundational ideal of American liberalism means the government is inclined to let capitalism thrive.
As a former congressional staffer and now a scholar of
But the issue is also immensely complex, and today's
Over time, as policies were adopted by the federal government, the scope of potential solutions expanded. To put it another way, as more cooks enter the policymaking kitchen, consensus became more difficult. The history of American health care is populated by private industries, powerful interest groups, federal officials and concerned citizens.
And the web of federal funding and private insurance companies across 50 states has resulted in a policy landscape that is easier to tweak, rather than whole-scale reform.
This is further stymied by the limited resources and expertise of the modern
The result? Tepid policy tweaks made for partisan messaging.
And as ideological divisions on government support and personal autonomy become crystallized by the two parties in
The continuing resolution passed late in 2025 funded the government only until



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