
Barring any late breakthroughs, Congress will begin an end-of-year holiday recess sometime next week and not return until Jan 5, after new premiums are locked in for those who had relied on the Affordable Care Act enhanced subsidy.
In back-to-back votes largely along party lines, Democrats and Republicans blocked each other’s bill.
The House of Representatives might attempt to pass some sort of legislation next week, which has not yet been unveiled. Even if it were to pass, Senate Democrats, and possibly some Republicans, would oppose it and they could use their votes to kill that effort.
“After today’s vote, the American healthcare crisis is 100% on their shoulders,” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said of Republicans.
Senate Republican leader John Thune dismissed the Democratic bill as “a political messaging exercise” and said “Republicans are ready to get to work. I’m not sure yet that Democrats are interested.”
The bitter battle in Congress has left some Americans uncertain over renewing their health insurance under the federal healthcare programme.
The percentage of returning customers in the Obamacare exchanges is slightly down from a year ago, with the government reporting 19.9% of people enrolled this year opting to renew their plans so far, down from 20.5% this time last year.
The Republican bill by US senators Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Mike Crapo of Idaho would have sent up to US$1,500 to individuals earning less than 700% of the federal poverty level – about US$110,000 for an individual or US$225,000 for a family of four in 2025.
Those funds could not be used for abortion or gender transition procedures and would require verification of beneficiaries’ immigration or citizenship status – provisions Democrats reject.
The Democratic proposal on the subsidies under the Affordable Care Act, popularly known as Obamacare, would have extended Covid-era subsidies for three years to keep insurance premiums from soaring for many.
Without action by Congress, those premiums could more than double in cost on average, according to KFF, a health policy organisation.
Sixty votes were needed to pass either measure in a Senate that Republicans control 53-47. Four Republicans voted for the Democratic proposal. No Democrats backed the Republicans’ bill.
President Donald Trump has largely sat out the brawl over healthcare, although he ultimately embraced the Cassidy-Crapo approach.
The US$1,500 payments in the Republican bill were meant to cover some of the out-of-pocket costs that people in the “Bronze” or “Catastrophic” categories – the lower-cost Obamacare plans – need to pay before their insurance kicks in.
However, it is far below the plans’ deductibles, meaning that even after that payment, a patient would be on the hook for up to US$7,500 in out-of-pocket medical expenses before their insurance would start to pay for part of their care.
Those costs can rack up quickly for people with lower-cost plans, with a visit to a US emergency room costing between US$1,000 and US$3,000, while an ambulance ride can cost anywhere from US$500 to over US$3,500.