A WARNING FROM THE SPEAKER

Johnson’s accusation cuts to the core of a long-simmering fight: whether Washington should keep pouring money into the existing system or force it to change. By his telling, Democrats quietly moved to extend pandemic-era subsidies that shield consumers in the short term but ultimately funnel billions to insurers without addressing the drivers of soaring premiums. Republicans, he insists, had drafted reforms to reduce costs by over 12 percent, only to see them stripped out in negotiations that favored speed over substance.

As the Senate advances its own funding bill and the Affordable Care Act subsidies near expiration, the stakes are no longer abstract. Families will soon feel whatever Congress decides in their monthly bills. Johnson is betting that voters are ready to hear a harder truth: that temporary subsidies cannot paper over a system designed to reward volume, complexity, and corporate power. The coming months will reveal whether that message sparks real reform — or just another round of blame.

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