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.
Updating earlier coverage of the discharge petition's progress, four House Republicans — Brian Fitzpatrick, Rob Bresnahan and Ryan Mackenzie of Pennsylvania, and Mike Lawler of New York — joined Democrats on December 18, 2025, providing the 218 signatures needed to bypass House leadership and compel a vote on a three-year extension of enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies. NPR and other outlets report that the subsidies are set to expire at the end of the month, with more than 20 million Americans relying on them and facing significant premium hikes if they lapse.
According to reporting from NPR and The Washington Post, the Republicans' move came hours before the House passed a narrow, Republican-led health care package that does not include an extension of the ACA subsidies. The bill, backed by Speaker Mike Johnson and GOP leadership, instead focused on other health policy priorities, such as expanding insurance options for small businesses and the self-employed. Efforts by moderates to add a temporary extension of the subsidies through amendments were rejected by leadership.
NPR congressional correspondent Barbara Sprunt explained that centrist Republicans had pressed leaders for an amendment vote on extending the subsidies, but leadership ultimately declined to allow one. Faced with returning home for the holidays without any vote on the subsidies, the four Republicans opted to sign the discharge petition, a procedural maneuver that enables a floor vote even over leadership's objections.
Under House rules, there is a waiting period before a discharge petition can receive a vote. NPR's coverage notes that the successful petition means the House is likely to vote on the three-year extension in early January, once lawmakers return from the holiday recess.
In interviews with NPR, Fitzpatrick and Democrat Tom Suozzi of New York — co-chairs of the bipartisan House Problem Solvers Caucus — said they are working toward a compromise approach and emphasized the stakes for their constituents if subsidies are not renewed. They pointed to concerns about premium spikes for millions of people who purchase coverage on the ACA marketplaces and stressed that members are focused on the local impact of any lapse in aid.
The House action has drawn attention to tensions between GOP leadership and moderates at a time when the party holds only a narrow majority. The episode follows other recent bipartisan efforts that have relied on unusual procedural tools, and it further illustrates how a small group of swing-district Republicans can upend leadership’s plans on high-profile issues such as health care.