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ACA Enrollment Plummets as Subsidies Lapse

More than 5 million Americans have lost health insurance coverage since the start of President Donald Trump's second term, according to new federal data. The decline follows a calculated refusal by congressional Republicans to extend vital tax credits that previously kept premiums affordable for millions of families across the country.

Bio & NewsJune 29, 2026860 reads0

Department of Health and Human Services figures released Friday confirm that ACA marketplace enrollment dropped to 19.2 million as of February. The sharp contraction stems directly from the expiration of enhanced tax credits at the start of 2026, a move that triggered immediate, double-digit premium hikes. Insurers, facing a new fiscal landscape, passed these costs to consumers, effectively pricing out gig workers, small business owners, and seniors not yet eligible for Medicare.

Anthony Wright, executive director of Families USA, rejected the administration’s claim that the drop represents a correction of fraudulent or phantom enrollment. He characterized the loss of coverage as a direct consequence of policy choices, warning that millions now face the prospect of rationing insulin or skipping cancer screenings to remain solvent. Rep. Sara Jacobs (D-Calif.) echoed these concerns, labeling the legislative package that included these cuts and $900 billion in Medicaid reductions the largest assault on federal healthcare in American history.

Projections from the Congressional Budget Office suggest the crisis is only in its early stages, with up to 16 million people potentially losing coverage by 2034. Advocates warn that the political trade-off—prioritizing tax cuts for the wealthy while gutting health security—has left families one medical emergency away from financial ruin.

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