U.S. House chamber celebrating bipartisan 230-196 vote to extend ACA premium tax credits for three years.
Billede genereret af AI

House passes three-year extension of enhanced ACA premium tax credits, with 17 Republicans joining Democrats

Billede genereret af AI
Faktatjekket

The U.S. House on Thursday, January 8, 2026, approved legislation to reinstate and extend for three years the enhanced Affordable Care Act premium tax credits that expired at the end of 2025. The bill passed 230-196 after Democrats used a discharge petition to force a vote, drawing support from 17 Republicans despite opposition from GOP leaders and former President Donald Trump.

The House moved the measure to the floor after a discharge petition—signed by all Democrats and four Republicans in December—successfully bypassed leadership control of the schedule.

Seventeen Republicans voted with Democrats to pass the bill: Reps. Rob Bresnahan, Mike Carey, Monica De La Cruz, Brian Fitzpatrick, Andrew Garbarino, Jeff Hurd, David Joyce, Tom Kean, Nick LaLota, Mike Lawler, Ryan Mackenzie, Max Miller, Zach Nunn, Maria Elvira Salazar, David Valadao, Derrick Van Orden and Rob Wittman.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York celebrated the vote on X, writing: “The House just decisively passed legislation that restores the Affordable Care Act tax credits. Over the objection of Donald Trump and Speaker Mike Johnson. If you don’t know, now you know.”

Lawler, a New York Republican, said his support did not amount to backing an unchanged three-year extension, but was aimed at moving Congress toward a negotiated outcome. “Healthcare affordability is not a political issue; it is a governing responsibility,” Lawler said in a statement. “My signature on the discharge for this bill, and my affirmative vote today, is not an endorsement of a clean 3-year extension, but rather a commitment to a bipartisan solution.” He added that he expected the Senate to consider changes and said he was “look[ing] forward to working with and voting on a Senate-amended bipartisan compromise in the weeks ahead.”

The enhanced credits were expanded during the COVID-19 era and later extended through 2025; their expiration has raised premiums for many marketplace enrollees. The bill now heads to the Senate, where its prospects are uncertain. A bipartisan group of senators has discussed a narrower, two-year extension paired with policy changes, including possible new limits on eligibility and other conditions.

The House vote also came as Congress works to avert another government shutdown ahead of a January 30 funding deadline. Lawmakers advanced a package of spending bills on Thursday to fund parts of the government through September, but additional legislation is still needed to fully prevent a lapse in funding.

Hvad folk siger

Reactions on X to the House's 230-196 passage of a three-year extension of enhanced ACA premium tax credits, with 17 Republicans joining Democrats, are divided. Supporters praise it as a win for affordable healthcare and defiance of GOP leaders. Critics denounce the Republicans as RINOs betraying Trump and enriching insurers. Neutral observers note Senate challenges and midterm influences.

Relaterede artikler

Dramatic House scene of bipartisan discharge petition forcing ACA subsidy extension vote.
Billede genereret af AI

Discharge Petition Forces House Vote on ACA Subsidy Extension as GOP Pushes Alternative Reforms

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI Faktatjekket

After weeks of stalemate over expiring Affordable Care Act premium tax credits, a Democratic-led discharge petition reached the crucial 218 signatures—with help from four House Republicans—clearing the way for a House vote on a clean three‑year extension of enhanced subsidies that are set to lapse at year’s end.

After the Senate failed to advance rival plans to address expiring enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies, House Republicans released their own proposal that does not extend the tax credits, instead emphasizing small-business insurance pooling, new rules for pharmacy benefit managers and future cost-sharing aid for low-income enrollees — drawing swift partisan criticism as year-end premium hikes loom.

Rapporteret af AI Faktatjekket

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.

The federal government shutdown has entered its third week, with no resolution in sight as Republicans and Democrats clash over extending enhanced subsidies for Affordable Care Act health insurance plans. The standoff affects millions, from furloughed workers to those relying on nutrition programs. President Trump has linked the impasse to efforts to shrink government size while targeting Democratic priorities.

Rapporteret af AI

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.

President Donald Trump on Saturday urged Senate Republicans to scrap the Affordable Care Act and send federal dollars that now support the law directly to Americans, intensifying a shutdown fight centered on expiring ACA subsidies during what has become the longest U.S. government shutdown on record.

Rapporteret af AI

The US House of Representatives voted 217-214 on February 3 to approve a spending package that ends a partial government shutdown, with President Donald Trump signing it into law shortly after. The legislation funds most federal departments through September but provides only a short-term extension for the Department of Homeland Security amid debates over immigration enforcement reforms. The shutdown, triggered by disputes following deadly shootings by federal agents in Minneapolis, lasted about four days.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis