Here’s a twist I wasn’t expecting. “A bipartisan bill to extend enhanced Obamacare subsidies has attracted 16 Republican co-sponsors, according to an official list obtained first by POLITICO.” The group is threatening to use a discharge petition to force a vote on the measure if Moses Mike doesn’t allow it.
The Kiggans-Gottheimer bill would extend enhanced premium tax credits for one year with new income caps and guardrails to crack down on fraud. The bill would also require a vote by July 2026 on other policies designed to reduce Americans’ health insurance premiums.
The bill currently counts the support of a total of 38 members, including Kiggans and Gottheimer. The Republican co-sponsors so far are Reps. Mike Lawler and Nick LaLota of New York; Rob Bresnahan, Ryan Mackenzie and Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania; María Elvira Salazar and Carlos Gimenez of Florida; Jeff Van Drew and Tom Kean of New Jersey; David Valadao and Kevin Kiley of California; Juan Ciscomani of Arizona; Jeff Hurd of Colorado; Don Bacon of Nebraska; and Monica De La Cruz of Texas.
I see my rep, Mike Lawler, on the list. I’m sure he realizes he doesn’t have a prayer of being re-elected next year if Medicaid tanks. He promised for months he would protect Medicaid, and then he voted for the Big Ugly Bill. People noticed.
The Senate is supposed to vote on two bills today to “fix” the subsidy problem. Neither is expected to pass.
The bill from the Democrats would extend the current subsidies for three years. The Republican bill is the one I wrote about yesterday, in which people under 50 who are losing the subsidy will instead get a whole $1,000 they can put in a Health Savings Account to help them with out-of-pocket expenses for a whole year, provided they pay for a high-deductible “bronze” account that has thousands of dollars in deductibles. Those from age 50 t0 Medicare age get $1,500. This will work for people who don’t need medical care, but if you do, you’re screwed. But as I said, neither is expected to pass.
I suppose we can have faint hope that the House bill will get voted on and the Senate will pass the House bill and that Trump would sign it.
See also The Senate is set to vote on 2 rival health plans. Here’s what’s at stake for Americans from the Associated Press. Good backgrounder.
Update: I understand neither bill made it past cloture. So they’re nixed.
In other news — a federal judge has ordered the long-suffering Kilmar Abrego Garcia to be released from ICE custody. See this very good explanation of what’s going on by David Kurtz at TPM — The Cruelest Irony of the Abrego Garcia Case.
Stuff to read — see John Roberts’s Dream Is Finally Coming True by David Daley at The Atlantic. It begins,
In 1982, when the Voting Rights Act was up for reauthorization, the Reagan Justice Department had a goal: preserve the VRA in name only, while rendering it unenforceable in practice. A young John Roberts was the architect of that campaign. He may soon get to finish what he started.
Update update: This just in — Justice Department again fails to indict New York Attorney General Letitia James. This was the third attempt. I say they’ve struck out. Will Trump make them try again?


