Tense CNBC interview between Joe Kernen and Sen. Rubén Gallego over government shutdown and ACA subsidies, with Kernen cutting the segment short.
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CNBC’s Joe Kernen ends tense interview with Sen. Rubén Gallego after clash over shutdown and ACA subsidies

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In a live CNBC appearance on October 27, 2025, Sen. Rubén Gallego of Arizona sparred with Squawk Box co-host Joe Kernen over Democrats’ push to extend Affordable Care Act subsidies during the ongoing government shutdown, leading Kernen to cut the interview short.

In Monday’s segment on CNBC’s Squawk Box, host Joe Kernen pressed Sen. Rubén Gallego (D-Ariz.) on Democrats’ conditions for reopening the government, centering on the pending expiration of enhanced Affordable Care Act (ACA) premium tax credits.

Kernen repeatedly asked what he said was a $1.5 trillion price tag tied to Democrats’ broader health-care asks, contrasting it with estimates that extending the enhanced ACA subsidies would cost about $40 billion for one year or roughly $300–$350 billion over a decade. Gallego replied, “I’m sorry, are you an insurance broker?” and argued Democrats were seeking to prevent steep premium hikes for “24 million Americans.” He also said the lapse would hit “500,000” people in Arizona. Independent estimates support the national figure and the risk of premium spikes; federal snapshots show roughly 410,000–425,000 Arizonans selected marketplace plans for 2025, suggesting the affected state population may be lower than Gallego’s rough estimate.

Kernen pressed again on the $1.5 trillion figure — a number Republicans have used to characterize Democrats’ combined push to make enhanced ACA subsidies permanent and to reverse recent Medicaid cuts — while Gallego maintained Democrats were “not demanding anything,” beyond protecting consumers from sharp premium increases. As the back-and-forth intensified, Kernen ended the interview, telling Gallego, “We’re finished.”

A separate clip circulating on social media — and highlighted by the Daily Wire — shows Kernen asking Gallego about past remarks on prior GOP-led shutdowns and includes Gallego responding, “I don’t know and I don’t care.” That exchange appears in partisan clips posted online; CNBC’s on-air segment verified by independent media shows the interview becoming heated over the ACA issue and then ending abruptly, but additional context for the “I don’t care” remark could not be independently confirmed.

Context: Marketplace enrollment has roughly doubled since the enhanced ACA tax credits were introduced and later extended through 2025. Nonpartisan analyses indicate that, without another extension, most marketplace enrollees would face significantly higher out-of-pocket premiums next year. Estimates of the 10‑year cost of making the enhanced subsidies permanent vary by source but generally fall in the mid‑$300 billion range, far below $1.5 trillion; Republicans arrive at the larger figure by adding other Democratic health policy aims to the tally. Those broader differences underpin the shutdown standoff that framed Monday’s exchange.

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Senate fails to advance dueling ACA health care proposals as subsidy deadline nears

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The U.S. Senate on December 11, 2025, failed to advance two partisan proposals aimed at addressing rising health insurance costs on the Affordable Care Act marketplaces before enhanced federal subsidies expire at year’s end. Democrats pushed a three-year extension of the subsidies, while Republicans backed redirecting federal assistance into health savings accounts, but neither bill secured the 60 votes needed to move forward, leaving millions of Americans facing steep premium increases without further congressional action.

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.

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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.

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.

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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.

On Dec. 18, four Republicans from competitive districts joined Democrats on a discharge petition, giving it 218 signatures and forcing a House vote on extending enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies. Hours earlier, House Republicans advanced a separate health care bill that omitted the subsidy extension, highlighting divisions inside the GOP over how to address looming premium increases.

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In the swing state of Wisconsin, affordability is top of mind for many voters. A recent NPR/PBS News/Marist poll found that nearly six in ten voters nationally say President Trump's top priority should be lowering prices, and that concern is being voiced loudly in Wisconsin.

 

 

 

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