Senate poised to reject extension of health care subsidies as costs rise
for many
[December 11, 2025]
By MARY CLARE JALONICK
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate is poised on Thursday to reject legislation
to extend Affordable Care Act tax credits for millions of Americans, a
potentially unceremonious end to a monthslong Democratic effort to
prevent the COVID-era subsidies from expiring on Jan. 1.
Despite a bipartisan desire to continue the credits, Republicans and
Democrats have never engaged in meaningful or high-level negotiations on
a solution. Instead, the Senate is expected to vote on two partisan
bills and defeat them both — essentially guaranteeing that many who buy
their health insurance on the ACA marketplaces see a steep rise in costs
at the beginning of the year.
“It’s too complicated and too difficult to get done in the limited time
that we have left,” said Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who has
unsuccessfully pushed his Republican colleagues to extend the tax
credits for a short time so they can find agreement on the issue next
year.
Neither side has seemed interested in compromise.
Democrats who forced a government shutdown for 43 days on the issue have
so far not wavered from their proposal to extend the subsidies for three
years with none of the new limits that Republicans have suggested.
Republicans are offering their own bill that would let the subsidies
expire, even as some in the GOP conference, like Tillis, have said they
would support an extension. The GOP proposal would create new health
savings accounts to replace the tax credits, an idea that Democrats
called “dead on arrival.”

The dueling Senate votes are the latest political messaging exercise in
a Congress that has operated almost entirely on partisan terms, as
Republicans pushed through a massive tax and spending cuts bill this
summer using budget maneuvers that eliminated the need for Democratic
votes. They also tweaked Senate rules to push past a Democratic blockade
of all of President Donald Trump’s nominees.
A small group of moderate Democratic senators crossed the aisle and made
a deal with Republicans to end the shutdown last month, raising some
hopes for a health care compromise that quickly faded with a lack of
real bipartisan talks.
An intractable issue
The votes were also the latest salvo in the debate over the Affordable
Care Act, former President Barack Obama’s signature law that Democrats
passed along party lines in 2010 to expand access to insurance coverage.
Republicans have tried unsuccessfully since then to repeal or overhaul
the law, arguing that health care is still too expensive. But they have
struggled to find an alternative. In the meantime Democrats have made
the policy a central political issue in several elections, betting that
the millions of people who buy health care on the government
marketplaces want to keep their coverage.
“When people’s monthly payments spike next year, they’ll know it was
Republicans that made it happen,” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer
said in November.
Schumer has also been clear that Democrats will not seek compromise.
Thursday’s vote is “the last train out of the station," he said. “What
we need to do is prevent premiums from skyrocketing, and only our bill
does it,” he said.

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Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, of N.Y., right, speaks as Sen.
Chris Murphy, D-Ct., left, listens during a news conference on
health insurance premiums on Capitol Hill, Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025,
in Washington. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib)

The health care shutdown
Even if they view it as a political win, the failed votes would be a
loss for Democrats who demanded an extension of the benefits as they
forced a government shutdown for six weeks in October and November —
and for the millions of people facing premium increases on Jan. 1.
While most Democratic senators pushed to keep the shutdown going as
Republicans refused to negotiate, a small group of centrist
Democrats struck a deal with Majority Leader John Thune for a future
health care vote, with no guarantee of success, in exchange for
their votes to reopen the government.
Maine Sen. Angus King, an Independent who caucuses with Democrats,
said the group tried to negotiate with Republicans after the
shutdown ended. But he said the talks became unproductive when
Republicans demanded language adding new limits for abortion
coverage that were a “red line” for Democrats.
“They’re going to own these increases,” King said of Republicans.
A plethora of plans, but little agreement
Republicans have used the looming expiration of the subsidies to
renew their longstanding criticisms of Obamacare and to try, once
more, to agree on what should be done. The GOP plan that the Senate
will vote on Thursday would replace the tax credits with health
savings accounts, an overhaul of the law that they say would put the
money in the hands of consumers, not insurance companies that
currently receive the current subsidies directly.
Thune announced Tuesday that the GOP conference had decided to vote
on the bill led by Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy, the chairman of the
Senate Health, Labor, Education and Pensions Committee, and Idaho
Sen. Mike Crapo, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, even
as several Republican senators proposed alternate ideas.

In the House, Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has promised a vote next
week. Republicans weighed different options in a conference meeting
on Wednesday, with no apparent consensus.
Moderates in the party who could have competitive reelection bids
next year are pushing Johnson to find a way to extend the subsidies.
But more conservative members want to see the law overhauled.
Rep. Kevin Kiley, R-Calif., has pushed for a temporary extension,
which he said could be an opening to take further steps on health
care.
If they fail to act and health care costs go up, the approval rating
for Congress “will get even lower,” Kiley said.
___
Associated Press writers Kevin Freking and Joey Cappelletti
contributed to this report.
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