09/17/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/17/2025 16:12
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: September 17, 2025 |
Contact: [email protected] |
READ: Gov. Evers Joins Coalition of Governors Urging Congress to Keep Healthcare Affordable by Extending ACA's Enhanced Premium Tax Credits |
In a joint letter to U.S. congressional leadership, coalition of 18 governors highlight importance ofextending tax creditsprovided by the Affordable Care Act to help keep premiums low and provide stability for millions of working families |
MADISON - Gov. Tony Evers, alongside a coalition of 17 other governors, sent a joint letter toU.S. House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, U.S. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, urging Congressto extend the enhanced premium tax creditsprovided by the Affordable Care Act (ACA)-credits thatare set to expire by the end of the yearif Congress does not act. According to the Center for American Progress, relative to original premium tax credits, the ACA's enhanced tax credits lowered marketplace premiums by an average of 44 percent for millions of low- and middle-income Americans in 2024. Thanks to the efforts of the Biden-Harris Administration, U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisconsin), U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wisconsin), and U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wisconsin), healthcare coverage has been more affordable than ever. Premium subsidies extended by the Biden-Harris Administration have helped 88 percent of Wisconsin consumersafford their health insurance premiums. Bolstered by the American Rescue Plan Act and extended by the Inflation Reduction Act, in 2023, the majority of Wisconsiniteswho enrolled in health insurance on HealthCare.govqualified for cost savings, with the average person saving $573.11 on their monthly insurance premiums. The letter from governors comes as working families across the state and country are already struggling to make ends meet and as President Donald Trump's budget reconciliationbill,which was supported and passed by Republicans in Congress, including every Republican member of Wisconsin's congressional delegation, reduces or eliminatesseveral federal initiatives that help keep healthcare affordableand accessible toall, including making significant changes to Medicaid, Medicare, and the ACA.According to the Wisconsin Department of Health Services andthe U.S. Congress Joint Economic Committee, all told,276,175 Wisconsinites will lose healthcare coverage under both the ACAand Medicaid under this new law over the next decade. "I've always believed healthcare should not be a privilege afforded only to the healthy and the wealthy. Wisconsinites should be able to get the healthcare they need when they need it," said Gov. Evers. "Far too many are feeling the pressure of rising costs, and folks should never have to choose between life-saving healthcare and getting their prescriptions or putting food on the table and keeping a roof over their head. Now more than ever, we should be working to make healthcare more affordable and more accessible-not making it more expensive and harder for folks to get the care they need. I'm proud to join my colleagues in urging Congress to extend these tax credits so we can keep doing what's best for kids, families, and communities in Wisconsin and across our country." Gov. Evers has long been committed to ensuring every Wisconsinite has access to quality, affordable healthcare. In 2019, the governor delivered on his promise to withdraw the state of Wisconsin from a Republican-led lawsuit that would have gutted the ACA, kicked thousands of Wisconsinites off their healthcare, and put 2.4 million Wisconsinites who have a pre-existing condition at risk. Gov. Evers also launched the DHS OCI Health Care Coverage Partnership in 2019 to improve coordination around outreach and education, increase enrollment and health insurance literacy, and improve enrollment retention. In 2020, this partnership launched WisCovered.com as an accessible resource for consumers looking for information about health coverage. Since it was signed into law by former President Barack Obama in 2010, the ACA has been transformational for folks and families across the state and country, providing healthcare coverage to millions of Wisconsin families and ensuring folks can access health insurance without lifetime limits and protecting the coverage of more than 100 million Americans-including 2.4 million Wisconsinites-who have pre-existing conditions thanks to a provision authored by Sen. Baldwin. Earlier this year, Gov. Evers announcedthat, according to enrollment data released by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, more than 313,000 Wisconsinites signed up for health insurance on the individual marketplace through the ACA during the 2025 Open Enrollment Period, marking the highest enrollment Wisconsin has ever reached. The successful Wisconsin Healthcare Stability Plan(WIHSP) has also held down rates on the individual marketplace. WIHSP was created by 2017 Wisconsin Act 138, a bipartisan bill signed into law in 2018 and implemented under Gov. Evers. WIHSP has helped keep health insurance rates low while increasing choices for consumers every year it has been in operation. Thanks to support from Gov. Evers and the Wisconsin State Legislature, WIHSP has been fully funded in each of the last three state biennial budgets. This program was most recently extended through Dec. 31, 2028. In 2022, health insurance rates were 14.5 percent lower,and in 2023, rates were 13.7 percent lowerthan they would have been without WIHSP. Rates on HealthCare.gov would have increased by 19.5 percent for the 2025 plan year, based on a weighted average. Thanks to WIHSP, rates on the individual health insurance market in Wisconsin will instead increase by a weighted average of 8.2 percent for the 2025 plan year. A copy of the governors'letter to U.S. congressional leadership isavailable here, and a transcript of the letter is available below: Speaker Johnson, Leader Jeffries, Leader Thune, and Leader Schumer, We urge you to extend the Affordable Care Act's enhanced premium tax credits. For millions of hard-working Americans, these subsidies are the only reason health insurance is still within reach in a country where the cost of living keeps going up. If they expire, premiums will rise by thousands of dollars for many families, millions will lose coverage, and people will be forced to make impossible choices between paying for healthcare, rent, or groceries. Hard-working American families, older Americans not yet on Medicare, small business owners, and rural communities-where marketplace coverage is often the only option-will be hit the hardest.
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An online version of this release is available here. |
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Office of the Governor • 115 East Capitol, Madison, WI 53702 | |
Press Office Email: [email protected] | |
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