With enrollment deadlines approaching for new health insurance plans, Republicans remain divided over how to handle expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies, even as President Trump continues to promise a better replacement plan.
Republicans are facing mounting pressure as the clock runs down on decisions about new health insurance plans and the future of subsidies under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Despite controlling both the White House and Congress, the GOP has not been able to enact a unified health care agenda, NPR reports.
On NPR's "Weekend Edition Sunday," host Ayesha Rascoe and White House correspondent Tamara Keith described it as "crunch time" for new insurance plans, noting that open enrollment deadlines are looming and that Republicans have yet to agree on how to address premium increases and the structure of federal assistance.
President Trump has repeatedly said he wants to replace Obamacare with something he argues would be less costly and provide better coverage. In public remarks in recent days, including at White House events, he has emphasized his desire to work with Congress on what he calls a superior alternative, though detailed legislative proposals from the administration have not materialized.
NPR's discussion highlights that internal Republican divisions — between those seeking to extend or adjust subsidies and those favoring more limited federal involvement — have stalled progress, even as insurers prepare rates and options for the coming plan year. The lack of consensus has raised concerns among policy analysts and advocates that some consumers could face higher premiums or fewer choices if current supports are allowed to lapse or are substantially altered without a replacement ready to go.
The NPR segment did not provide specific figures on how many people could be affected, nor did it cite detailed polling on Republican marketplace users or projections from the Kaiser Family Foundation about premium increases. However, analysts generally agree that changes to federal subsidies can significantly affect what millions of people pay for coverage on the ACA marketplaces.
As the enrollment period heads into its final weeks, Republicans in Congress are weighing a range of options, from more bipartisan approaches aimed at stabilizing the marketplaces to narrower GOP-backed measures focused on targeted premium relief. For now, though, their broader health agenda remains stuck, leaving consumers and insurers uncertain about what the landscape will look like in the new year.