Republicans largely attacked the ACA subsidy over its provision that sends federal dollars to insurance companies to help reduce premium costs. "Throwing more money at the insurance companies is not the answer," Representative Morgan Griffith of Virginia said during House debate.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office on Tuesday said the legislation would decrease the number of people with health insurance by an average of 100,000 per year through 2035. Its money-saving provisions would reduce federal deficits by $35.6 billion, the CBO said.
Republican Representative Kevin Kiley of California said in a floor speech that he would support the Republicans’ targeted healthcare bill despite reservations. “The bill does not address the immediate, urgent problem in front of us, which is that 22 million people are about to pay a lot more for health insurance,” Kiley said.
The Senate, also controlled by
President Donald Trump's Republicans, last week
rejected dueling Republican and Democratic plans
to address the subsidies.
SUBSIDIES CAUSE OF RECORD GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN
Tensions are high over the expiring healthcare subsidies under the Affordable Care Act, which were the cause of the record-breaking government shutdown earlier this fall. Democrats withheld their support of a temporary government funding bill unless the subsidy was extended. Republicans refused that demand.
The debate over healthcare — one that has pitted Republicans against Democrats for decades — is more than a policy matter. The November 2026 congressional elections hang heavy over lawmakers at a time when Republican President Donald Trump's public approval rating is weak.
The four Republicans who joined forces with House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries in trying to advance a three-year
ACA subsidy extension represent districts that could see competitive re-election races next year. Three of them come from the swing state of Pennsylvania, with the fourth from New York.
Even though the Republican-controlled House passed the healthcare bill, it is unlikely to be taken up by the Senate before Congress begins a looming end-of-year recess that would stop legislative action until January 5. By then, millions of Americans will be looking at significantly more expensive health insurance premiums that could prompt some to go without coverage.
Wednesday's House floor battle could embolden
Democrats and some Republicans to revisit the issue in January, even though higher premiums will already be in the pipeline.
Referring to the House debate, moderate Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski told reporters: "I think that that will help prompt a response here in the Senate after the first of the new year, and I'm looking forward to that.”
Reporting by Richard Cowan and Bo Erickson; Additional reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Scott Malone, Rod Nickel, Alistair Bell and Christopher Cushing.
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