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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMaddowBlog-On keeping health care coverage affordable, the GOP's Steve Scalise gives away the game
Last edited Mon Oct 13, 2025, 08:51 PM - Edit history (1)
Speaker Mike Johnson said Republicans are ready for thoughtful conversations about the ACAs future. Thats not, however, what the majority leader said.
If Dems were solely interested in politics and the midterms, they could let Republicans kill off the ACA subsidies, let consumers suffer, watch the public blame the GOP, and reap the rewards of the election-year backlash.
— Steve Benen (@stevebenen.com) 2025-10-13T19:24:11.763Z
Instead, theyâre at least trying to govern. www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddo...
https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/keeping-health-care-coverage-affordable-gops-steve-scalise-gives-away-rcna237304
Its not worked for families. You dont answer that by propping it up with hundreds of billions of dollars of insurance company subsidies. Why would you keep pouring billions more tax dollars into a sinkhole when you can find a better way? We actually are working on better alternatives right now to lower premiums for families. Thats where the focus should be, not propping up a failed product called Obamacare.
The Louisiana Republican added that, from his perspective, 90% of the House Republican conference sees the Affordable Care Act and its enhanced insurance subsidies as a failure.
To the extent that governing realities matter, Scalise has the substance backwards: The reason that the ACA has reached all-time highs in popularity and efficacy is that the Covid-era subsidies approved by Democrats made a good thing better, lowering consumer costs significantly. Thats not a sinkhole; its the opposite......
With this in mind, its the majority party that finds itself under pressure. The Washington Post reported over the weekend that the Trump White House and a growing number of congressional Republicans are worried that Democrats demand to boost Obamacare as part of any bill to reopen the government is proving salient with voters including their own. Republican voters will be disproportionately hurt by a spike in health insurance premiums if the measure is not included. And many of them are well aware of whats at risk.
Those looking for a way out of this mess, however, will have to look for a while longer: The House speakers office announced Friday that Johnson decided to give members yet another week off, even as the House Democratic minority made plans to return to Capitol Hill, eager to work on a solution. Watch this space.
Skittles
(172,852 posts)IT'S ALL BULLSHIT
they want it to go back to the way it was before ACA
Bettie
(19,872 posts)is a rolling two weeks....apparently, two weeks from, um...never.
JustAnotherGen
(38,109 posts)Of Infrastructure Week. Remember that from the first disastrous Admin.
bucolic_frolic
(55,810 posts)I mean, the GOP has decided and they're just trying to close off the opposition. They are cornered.
Wounded Bear
(64,628 posts)Bernardo de La Paz
(60,320 posts)Jack Valentino
(5,250 posts)Neither has ripping husbands and wives away from their U.S. citizen spouses,
just because their 'paperwork' was not quite in order....
Republicans have proven themselves the ENEMY of families,
and all their "pro-family" talk has always been a huge pile of BULLSHIT!
The same goes for all their pretenses of being 'christian'!
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