If you've been enjoying relatively affordable health insurance through the Affordable Care Act, you might want to brace yourself. The enhanced premium subsidies that have kept those monthly bills manageable are scheduled to vanish at the end of 2025, and nobody seems to have a plan for what comes next.
The Health Care Cliff Ahead
Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas) didn't mince words on Friday when she described what's coming as a full-blown "health care cliff." The enhanced ACA premium tax credits that have helped millions afford coverage are about to expire, and according to Crockett, neither Republicans nor President Trump have proposed anything to soften the landing.
"People are really, really scared about what we know is about to happen," Crockett said on MS NOW. She pointed to seniors in her district who are already feeling squeezed as rent climbs while their incomes remain flat. Adding higher health insurance premiums to that equation isn't exactly going to help.
"It seems like this administration, the Republicans, are not interested in doing anything to make health care more affordable in this country," she added.
Her advice to constituents? Don't wait for politicians to figure it out. "Don't listen to the Democrats or the Republicans on this issue," she said. Instead, call your health insurance providers directly to find out what new premiums could look like.
Trump's Plan: Make Insurers Charge Less
President Trump has floated his own approach, though it's light on specifics. Last week, he said, "I'm going to call in the insurance companies that are making so much money, and they have to make less, a lot less." Whether insurers will voluntarily slash their profit margins because the president asks nicely remains to be seen.
Trump has also accused Democrats of being "beholden" to insurance companies and suggested they might force another government shutdown. Speaking of which, Crockett predicted another shutdown looms after January 30 when current funding expires, saying Republicans "couldn't care less about doing what they're supposed to do, which is to govern."
GOP Health Bill and 2026 Midterm Worries
Earlier this month, House Republican leaders announced plans to introduce a GOP-only health care bill, according to Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.). The problem? Details remain fuzzy, including whether those expiring ACA subsidies would be extended at all.
Moderate Republicans have been quietly exploring temporary subsidy extensions with Democrats, while House Majority Leader Steve Scalise hinted the final bill might exclude them entirely. It's not exactly a unified message.
Former White House Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove issued a stark warning: without a clear health care plan alongside a strong economic agenda, Republicans are risking major losses in the 2026 midterms. Rising premiums from the subsidy expiration could impact millions of voters, and internal GOP divisions aren't helping matters.
Rove's takeaway? Republicans need a forward-looking agenda that addresses both the economy and health care if they want to improve their prospects in 2026. Otherwise, those skyrocketing premiums might come with a political price tag.




