Rank-and-file House members from both parties are growing impatient as the year’s end approaches, and neither party’s leaders are budging on health care.
Rep.
Shortly after, House Majority Leader
“Our leaderships — neither Democrat nor Republican — have put forth a plan that can earn 60 votes in the Senate, so we’re working together across the aisle,” said Rep. Nick LaLota (D-N.Y.), part of the bipartisan group that supports a one-year extension.
The framework proposed by Kiggans and Rep.
Their proposal is just one in a flurry released over the past few weeks as members press for an extension of the premium tax credits in the face of opposition from a broad swath of Republicans. Multiple lawmakers, including Reps.
“I’ll consider any one of these options,” Suozzi said. “Anything: I’ll consider one year, two year, three year, income caps at this level, at that level, at that level, fraud protections — all the different things that people are proposing.” He and his Problem Solvers Caucus co-chair, Rep.
Members are growing frustrated with leaders’ reluctance to find any agreement on the issue. The enhanced premium tax credits are especially unpopular among House Republicans, giving Speaker
Johnson said Republicans are working on their own health care bill, though it’s near certain it won’t include any extension of the enhanced premium tax credits. “The Democrats broke American health care,” the speaker told reporters Thursday, railing against the Affordable Care Act.
“Their answer is to subsidize it, to take more taxpayer dollars and dump it onto a broken system, to subsidize insurance companies so the prices continue to go up for everyone,” he added. “That is not the solution.”
The Senate also looks increasingly unlikely to send over a bipartisan extension. Senators will vote on Democrats’ three-year clean extension next Thursday, the same proposal House Democratic leaders have trumpeted.
“That’s not a serious proposal by Chuck Schumer, and he knows that,” said Hurd, one of the Republicans who supports a shorter extension with guardrails.
K. Sophie Will in Washington and Caitlin Reilly also contributed to this story.
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