
Republicans race to pass competing health care bill as clock ticks on Obamacare subsidies
Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
The Crapo-Cassidy bill would allow the Obama-era subsidies to lapse, instead boosting funds for health savings accounts. Eligible adults under the age of 50 would receive $1,000 deposited into their HSA while those between the ages 50 and 64 would get $1,500.
It would also fund cost-sharing reduction payments and provide eligible Americans the option to purchase “bronze” or “catastrophic” health care plans. Notably the Republicans’ legislation blocks funds for “gender transition procedures” and abortions.
Although Republicans are expected to vote for the legislation, it is unlikely to pass due to the 60-vote filibuster threshold. Assuming all 53 Republicans vote in favor of the bill, at least seven Democrats would have to cross the aisle for the legislation to pass the Senate.
RELATED: Democrat senator makes stunning admission about Obamacare failures
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images
Other Republicans, like Sen. Rick Scott of Florida, are also introducing alternative health care bills. Scott introduced his More Affordable Care Act alongside Republican Study Committee Chairman August Pfluger (Texas), who spearheaded the companion bill in the House.
Scott and Pfluger’s bill would create Trump Health Freedom Accounts, redirecting federal subsidies traditionally sent to insurance companies to these HSA-style accounts held by individual Americans. The bill would also establish a Health Freedom Waiver Program, allowing states to broaden their health plans and expand competition to offer fairer prices.
At this time, there is no vote scheduled for Scott’s legislation.
Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
You may also like
By mfnnews
search
categories
Archives
navigation
Recent posts
- Pope Leo calls out ‘inclusive’ language as a painful, ‘Orwellian’ movement in the West January 10, 2026
- How a pro-life law in Kentucky lets mothers get away with murder January 10, 2026
- Young white Americans want their own identity politics now — and conservatives shouldn’t be surprised January 10, 2026
- House to vet Madriaga”s claims vs VP Sara, says Ridon January 10, 2026
- Iranian hospitals overwhelmed with injuries as protests rage across Islamic Republic January 10, 2026
- Trump answers on whether he’d order a mission to capture Putin January 10, 2026
- US military launches airstrikes against ISIS targets in Syria, officials say January 10, 2026








Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.