Thune previews health care challenges ahead of 2026

Senate Majority Leader John Thune described 2025 as a productive year under President Donald Trump's second term, highlighting major legislative achievements. Looking forward, he anticipates a significant debate over Affordable Care Act subsidies set to expire soon. Thune advocates for expanding health savings accounts to empower individuals in choosing insurance options.

John Thune assumed the role of Senate Majority Leader in November 2024, succeeding Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. In an interview with The Daily Wire's Tim Rice for the "Morning Wire" podcast, Thune reviewed the past year and outlined upcoming priorities.

The leader called 2025 "very productive," crediting the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," which Congress passed and Trump signed into law in July. This sweeping legislation addressed key Republican goals, including national security, border control, energy policy, tax reforms, school choice, newborn accounts, childcare provisions, and a farm bill. Thune described it as featuring "the biggest spending reduction literally in history." Achieving this in one package was a "Herculean task," he noted, as spreading it out over time would have highlighted the volume of accomplishments more clearly. The Senate also confirmed Trump administration nominees and reduced regulatory burdens, particularly in energy.

Despite these successes, Thune flagged a major hurdle for early 2026: the expiration of Affordable Care Act subsidies on Wednesday, which could drive up health insurance premiums. The debate echoes a fall 2025 government shutdown centered on Obamacare, with another potential crisis looming if Congress fails to extend funding beyond January 30. Conservatives view the program as fundamentally unsustainable.

Thune outlined preferred reforms, emphasizing consumer choice. "What we do believe makes sense is a model that creates for an expansion of health savings accounts and putting the money back in the pockets of people in this country, incentivizing them to buy the insurance that makes sense for them, rather than buying the insurance the government tells 'em they have to buy," he said. This approach, he argued, would yield lower premiums and better coverage access—elements absent from recent Democratic proposals.

On national security, Thune praised Trump's focus on border security, military strength, and a "peace through strength" doctrine. He referenced the recent antisemitic attack in Bondi Beach, Australia, as a tragic reminder of global threats, stressing the need to equip law enforcement and prosecute perpetrators fully.

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Symbolic illustration of U.S. Capitol depicting Senate failure and House debate on expiring ACA subsidies influencing 2026 midterms.
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ACA subsidy clash shapes 2026 midterms as Senate plan fails and House weighs next steps

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After the U.S. Senate rejected dueling plans to address expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies, the fight has spilled into 2026 midterm politics and shifted pressure to the House, where Republicans are advancing alternative premium‑relief ideas while centrists push for an extension.

Congress began 2025 with bold plans to bolster the economy, secure the border, and enhance military strength, but ended the year having passed a record-low number of bills and surrendered significant authority to President Trump. Internal divisions hampered Republican leaders in both chambers amid narrow majorities. Looking ahead, midterm elections and pressing issues like affordability loom large.

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President Donald Trump unveiled his 'Great Healthcare Plan' via social media video, focusing on drug prices and insurance reforms but ignoring rising Affordable Care Act premiums. The announcement comes as Senate negotiations on extending expired ACA subsidies falter, with enrollment deadlines looming. A House bill to extend the subsidies passed last week despite Republican opposition.

Senate Democrats, led by Chuck Schumer, blocked a Republican effort to reopen the federal government for the eighth time on October 14, 2025, as the shutdown entered its 14th day. The impasse centers on demands for extending Obamacare subsidies before their expiration, while Republicans insist on reopening first. Escalating tensions include administration firings of federal employees and Democratic threats of lawsuits over the moves.

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In a 60-40 Sunday vote on November 9, 2025, the Senate cleared a procedural hurdle to end the 40‑day government shutdown — the longest in U.S. history — after seven Democrats and independent Angus King joined Republicans. The agreement funds the government through January 30, 2026, but does not guarantee an extension of Affordable Care Act premium tax credits, drawing opposition from Democratic leaders.

The U.S. Senate postponed a vote on a bipartisan funding agreement Thursday night following objections from Sen. Lindsey Graham, potentially leading to a partial government shutdown at midnight Friday. The deal, endorsed by President Trump, would fund most government operations until September while extending Department of Homeland Security funding for two weeks to negotiate immigration enforcement reforms. Graham opposed separating DHS funding and the repeal of a provision allowing senators to sue over phone record access.

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The U.S. federal government shutdown, now in its 13th day as of October 13, 2025, stems from a partisan clash over extending Affordable Care Act subsidies and passing a clean funding bill. Democrats have blocked multiple Senate votes on a Republican-proposed continuing resolution, insisting on protections against rising health care premiums. Polls show voters blame Republicans more for the impasse, yet trust them more on economic issues.

 

 

 

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