In a post on Truth Social, the president took a harder stance against health care companies and the Affordable Care Act.
President Donald Trump said on Nov. 18 that he would only approve legislation that provides direct health care payments to Americans amid looming congressional discussions over extending insurance subsidies that are set to expire.
โThe only healthcare I will support or approve is sending the money directly back to the people, with nothing going to the big, fat, rich insurance companies, who have made $trillions, and ripped off America long enough,โ Trump wrote in an all-caps post on Truth Social.
The president added that under the plan, Americans would be able to negotiate and purchase insurance before sending a message to members of Congress. He didnโt provide further details about how it might work.
โCongress, do not waste your time and energy on anything else. This is the only way to have great Healthcare in America!!! GET IT DONE, NOW,โ he wrote in the post.
The government shutdown that ended last week was, in part, caused by a disagreement over health care policy.
Democrats wanted to include an extension of COVID-19 pandemic-era health care subsidies, set to expire at the end of the year, in a stopgap measure to reopen the government. Republicans said it was a separate policy matter to be addressed at another time.
Trump told reporters over the weekend that he had โpersonal talks with some Democratsโ over how to deal with health care. Days before that, the president spoke to Fox News in an interview where he included a suggestion about the direct payment plan.
โPeople love it,โ he told reporters at the time. โThe insurance companies are making a fortune. Their stock is up over 1,000 percent over a short period of time. They are taking in hundreds of billions of dollars, and theyโre not really putting it back, certainly not like they should.โ
When asked about the idea during the Fox interview, Trump said that the money would โgo into an account for people where the people buy their own health insurance,โ which he said would cost less.
The president also criticized the Affordable Care Act (ACA), known as Obamacare, by saying that health care premiums have increased dramatically in recent years.







