House Speaker Johnson rebuffs efforts to extend health care subsidies, pushing ahead with GOP plan
Speaker
“We looked for a way to try to allow for that pressure release valve,” Johnson said Tuesday at the
The maneuvering surrounding the health care vote all but guarantees that many Americans will see substantially higher insurance costs in 2026. In the
Instead,
The
An analysis from the nonpartisan
Failing to address expiring insurance subsidies ‘political malpractice’
Rep.
Lawler, who hails from a competitive district, noted that most people who get their health coverage through the Affordable Care Act live in states that President
“You have two leaders who are not serious about solving this problem,” Lawler said of Johnson and Jeffries.
Still, the centrist
Johnson defended the
“We have a long list of things that we know will reduce premiums, increase access and quality of care,” Johnson said. “The Democrats have zero ideas, zero concepts and zero legislative plans on anything they’ll propose other than just subsidizing the broken system.”
"Millions will be priced out of their coverage, and those who can still afford it will get less while paying more," said Rep.
GOP bill focuses on insurance options and cost-sharing
During Trump's first term, his administration sought to expand access to association health plans that don't have to offer the full menu of benefits required under current law. The option offers lower premiums for small businesses and self-employed people, but the policies are likely to cover fewer benefits. A federal judge who struck down the administration's effort in 2018 said the plans were were “clearly an end-run” around consumer protections required by the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.
The House Republican plan would also restore government funding for cost-sharing reductions, or CSRs, a type of financial help that insurers give to low-income ACA enrollees on silver-level plans that reduces their share of costs like deductibles and copays.
From 2014 until 2017, the federal government reimbursed insurance companies for CSRs — but in 2017, the Trump administration stopped making those payments. To make up for the lost funds, insurance companies hiked premiums for silver-level plans -- a complicated move that ended up increasing the financial assistance many enrollees get to help pay for premiums.
As a result, health analysts say that while restoring funding for CSRs would likely bring down silver-level premiums, it could also have the unwelcome ripple effect of increasing many people’s net premiums on bronze and gold plans.
The provisions related to pharmacy benefit managers require the middlemen to disclose certain data about their operations to group health plans, with the hope that more transparency would reduce prescription drug costs.
Senators revive talks of action in the new year
Almost two dozen
Senate Majority Leader
—-
Staff writers



How major US stock indexes fared Tuesday, 12/16/2025
Health care premiums set to soar as GOP leaders see no expanded credits
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