Moderate House lawmakers will not get to vote on extending Obamacare premium subsidies before the end of the year, Speaker
The enhanced Affordable Care Act premium tax credits are set to expire in 15 days, which will send payments soaring. House Republican moderates were hoping to vote on an amendment to add an extension to a separate GOP health policy bill this week.
The announcement makes certain that Covid-era enhanced credits will end after Dec. 31. Senators want negotiations to continue into the new year, but they’ll face even more barriers to an agreement after the subsidies lapse.
Johnson said an agreement didn’t emerge during talks over the weekend. “Many of them did want a vote on this Obamacare, Covid-era subsidy the Democrats created,” he said. “We looked for a way to try to allow for that pressure release valve, and it was just not to be.”
House Majority Leader
Republican Backlash
Swing-district Republicans laid into their own leaders for the decision after a party meeting Tuesday morning, with high-profile moderate Rep.
“You have two leaders that are not serious about solving this,” said Lawler. He also criticized Democratic Leader
Reps.
“We have a unified Democratic position,” Jeffries said Monday night. “All 214 House Democrats have made clear the best path forward is a straightforward extension of the Affordable Care Act tax credits, and the Republicans on the other side now are crashing and burning.” Neither Lawler nor Rep.
Kiley, who’s at risk of losing his seat due to mid-decade redistricting in California, called the situation “a failure of leadership on both sides.”
“This is why people are so frustrated with Congress,” Kiley said Tuesday. “And why Congress has — what, a 15% approval rating? I think it’s going to go down if we don’t get something done here.”
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