Trump’s Fix for Healthcare is to Make It More Difficult to Obtain

You shouldn’t have to pay $thousands for healthcare. You should be able to obtain healthcare at a reasonable cost. Millions of citizens have been pushed out of healthcare programs as they were disqualified.

There was a time in the past when healthcare costs were better. It has become more of a profit center for corporations.

In its first term, the Trump administration attempted to repeal the ACA but failed to pass the necessary legislation. However, it has (with the help of Republicans in Congress) inflicted damage to the ACA marketplaces. Last year, despite support by a majority of the public for the enhanced ACA premium tax credits, Republicans did not pass legislation to extend them, which led to average annual premium increases of $750 to $4,035, depending on income. H.R. 1, the legislation that passed on a party-line vote with nearly all Republicans supporting and all Democrats voting against, cut millions of legal immigrants and asylees1 from coverage. It imposed new income verification requirements. Additionally, the Trump administration’s marketplace rule for 2026 increased out-of-pocket costs, eliminated special-enrollment periods for low-income people, and placed new restrictions on autoenrollment. Insurers raised premiums for the marketplaces by more than 20 percent, in an effort to protect themselves against healthier customers dropping coverage, leaving only sicker (and more costly) people in the market. The bulk of the increase was attributable to the recent policy changes.

When an administration proposes new rules, the public has a right to provide input. In this way, regulations can be improved and better reflect the nation’s preferences.

For people too poor to be eligible for marketplace subsidies in states that have not expanded Medicaid and those with incomes that make them ineligible for cost-sharing subsidies, the administration suggests “catastrophic” health plans. Such plans cover catastrophic medical costs but leave people paying for most routine health care, after an allowance of three primary care visits and preventive care mandated by the ACA. The administration is also proposing that these plans be permitted to only cover health care expenses beyond these allowances after a person has spent more than $15,000 on health care. This amount is roughly equivalent to the total annual income of a person living at or below the poverty level.

The administration also loosens physician network requirements for health plans and proposes that health insurers be allowed to offer “nonnetwork” plans. In nonnetwork plans, all providers are out of network. Instead of negotiating rates with a network of providers, plans will pay a set amount of the cost of a covered benefit; the enrollee is responsible for paying the difference between that cost and what providers charge.

1An asylee is an individual already present in the United States or at a port of entry who is unable or unwilling to return to their home country due to a well-founded fear of persecution based on race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group.