President Donald Trump wants to fundamentally reshape how Americans get health coverage, and his pitch is straightforward: cut out the middlemen and send federal health care dollars directly to people.
The Proposal: Money in Your Hands, Not Theirs
Speaking to reporters Sunday, Trump outlined his vision as an alternative to the current system, which he argues has let insurance companies rake in massive profits. His solution? Redirect those funds to citizens so they can shop for their own insurance and negotiate their own prices.
"If it gets approved, we're gonna take the money, we're gonna pay it back to the people of our country to go out and buy health insurance so they could put it in a health account," Trump explained.
The idea, according to Trump, would give Americans more flexibility to purchase insurance at different coverage levels instead of being boxed in by insurers' cost controls. He claims there's broader support than you might expect, suggesting that even "some" Democrats have expressed interest. When pressed for names, though, Trump kept his cards close. "People love it," he said, adding that discussions are ongoing.
The Administration's Case
Dr. Mehmet Oz, who now runs the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, appeared on CNN's State of the Union Sunday and highlighted what he called "fundamental flaws" in existing health care legislation and how COVID-era subsidies were tacked on. "The president's willing to look at all options," Dr. Oz said. "Our goal is to get people covered."
The proposal isn't coming out of nowhere. It follows Trump's call during the recent government shutdown to abolish the Affordable Care Act—commonly known as Obamacare—and directly allocate federal health care funds to Americans instead.
Legislative Support
Sen. Rick Scott jumped on board quickly, backing Trump's vision and declaring, "I'm writing the bill right now." The Florida Republican argues the President's proposal would boost competition, drive down costs, and stop wasteful spending of taxpayer dollars.
The Pushback
Not everyone's buying what Trump's selling. Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg slammed the proposal as a "bad deal" on health insurance, warning that Republican-backed changes to the ACA could drive premiums up by as much as 10% in 2026.
Economist Peter Schiff, while not explicitly endorsing Trump's plan, reiterated his longstanding opposition to Obamacare in a November 14 post on X. He pointed out that the Affordable Care Act failed to deliver on its promise to control rising health care costs, and questioned why extending enhanced subsidies—which expire December 31, 2025—would somehow work when the original law didn't.
The debate highlights a familiar tension in American health care policy: how to balance coverage, cost, and individual choice. Trump's proposal represents a dramatic shift toward consumer-directed health care, but whether it can gain the bipartisan support needed to pass—and whether it would actually deliver lower costs and better coverage—remains to be seen.