President Donald Trump is getting ready to unveil a health care framework that tackles rising insurance costs and puts pressure on Congress to act before Affordable Care Act subsidies disappear when the calendar flips to 2026. The plan represents Trump's most comprehensive health policy initiative since the government shutdown wrapped up, and it arrives as political anxiety builds over the prospect of premium increases hitting millions of Americans.
Expected to drop as early as Monday, the proposal will be announced at the White House with remarks from Trump and Mehmet Oz, who runs the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. According to White House officials cited by MS NOW, the framework would lay out a two-year extension of Obamacare subsidies, updated eligibility thresholds, and several mechanisms designed to prevent premium spikes that could impact approximately 22 million people.
Congressional heavyweights including Senate Majority Leader John Thune and House Speaker Mike Johnson were scheduled to get briefed on Sunday, signaling how seriously the administration is taking this rollout. The timing isn't accidental. Democrats hammered away at ACA premiums during the shutdown negotiations, pushing Republicans to commit to a December vote on extending the subsidies.
What's Actually in the Plan
The proposed legislation goes by the name "Healthcare Price Cuts Act," and it's aimed squarely at what the administration describes as "surprise premium hikes" under the ACA. One of the more controversial elements would eliminate zero-premium subsidies, which Republicans have long complained about, linking them to so-called "ghost beneficiaries." Under the new framework, everyone would need to make a minimum payment to verify they're actually using their coverage.
Here's where it gets interesting: Trump's plan includes a deposit-based incentive program. If you pick a cheaper ACA plan, the difference between what you chose and a pricier option gets deposited into a taxpayer-funded Health Savings Account, according to Politico. It's essentially rewarding people for shopping smart on health insurance.
The proposal also asks Congress to allocate funding for cost-sharing reductions, which would lower what people pay out of pocket when they actually use their insurance. And there's a new eligibility cap being introduced at 700% of the federal poverty line, which aligns with what a bipartisan Senate group has been discussing behind the scenes.
Companies Worth Watching
Any significant changes to ACA subsidies and eligibility will ripple through the health insurance sector. Major players include Cigna Group (CI), Centene Corp (CNC), Elevance Health, Inc. (ELV), Humana Inc (HUM), Molina Healthcare Inc (MOH), and UnitedHealth Group Inc (UNH). Smaller focused insurers like Oscar Health Inc (OSCR) and Alignment Healthcare Inc (ALHC) could also see meaningful impacts depending on how the framework gets translated into legislation.
Public Opinion and Political Reality
Polling data from KFF shows substantial public appetite for keeping ACA tax credits alive. About 74% of Americans support renewing them, and notably, half of Republicans are on board too. That kind of bipartisan public support gives the White House some political cover, even if the policy details get messy during congressional negotiations.
The broader context matters here. Premium spikes aren't just policy abstractions; they're the kind of kitchen-table issue that drives voting behavior. By pushing this framework now, the administration is trying to get ahead of a problem that could become politically toxic if Congress lets subsidies lapse and premiums jump for millions of voters heading into another election cycle.
Whether Congress can actually pass something before the subsidies expire remains an open question. But at least now there's a concrete proposal on the table to argue about, which is more than existed a week ago.