Regardless of how the shutdown ends, Democrats have accomplished one major political goal: placing health care top of mind for this election and potentially the next.
Democrats have staked the shutdown fight on combating rising health care costs, demanding that Republicans work with them to extend Affordable Care Act tax credits that are set to expire at the end of the year. And as interested as Democrats are in solving the problem of rising Obamacare premiums, they know there’s a political benefit to this issue hanging over everyone’s head.
“Health care is our ‘dance with the one that brought ya’ issue,” one House Democrat, granted anonymity to discuss the party’s strategy, told MSNBC. “We are trusted on it and we’ve won on it. We are wise to make it our issue for the midterms.”
Another senior Democrat, Rep. Gregory Meeks of New York, emphasized that health care is an issue that touches everyone’s life — saying the cost will “absolutely” still resonate with voters heading into next year.
“Independents, Democrats, moderate Republicans — this affects all of them,” Meeks told MSNBC. “Everybody sees these rates going up.”
Meanwhile, Republicans have argued that the Obamacare subsidies are an issue that can be discussed down the road — after the government is reopened — since the expiration date isn’t until the end of December. But that position falls into a potential political trap, with Obamacare enrollees now getting a glimpse of their dramatically increased rates, and seeing just one party actively engaged in trying to lower the premiums.
No matter how the shutdown ends, the off-ramp will likely ensure that health care is a live issue for the 2026 midterm elections. Even if Democrats succeed in extending most of the subsidies — something that is certainly not a given — those subsidies will likely be temporary, and premiums will almost certainly still go up for most enrollees.
In other words: Even when the issue is settled, it’s unlikely to be settled.
Consider some of the potential solutions lawmakers are discussing. One possibility Democrats have put forward is a simple, one-year extension of the existing credits. That would place the Obamacare fight front and center for 2026, with President Donald Trump repeatedly on the record pushing Republicans to replace the 2010 health care law with something else — and with both parties keenly aware of the electoral results the last time the GOP tried to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.
Millions of people are seeing their health care costs more than double because of Republicans. Their obsession with gutting Americans’ health care is going to cost them the House Majority.”
Viet Shelton, spokesman for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee
Another possibility is a scaled-down version of the Obamacare tax credits, with Republicans like Senate Majority Leader John Thune of South Dakota publicly floating income caps. But even that legislative remedy would have real-world and political consequences, as fewer people would likely sign up for Obamacare and premiums would still rise for most enrollees.
In both scenarios, health care will be a very public debate — and a point of pain — for the rest of the year, and potentially for the rest of this congressional term.
“I’ll leave the politics to others,” Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., told MSNBC, “but I can tell you what’s just a problem for people is if their health care premium is double, because they’re already too expensive.”
Polling has historically demonstrated that Democrats have a sizable advantage on health care, with surveys showing voters trust them more than Republicans on the issue.
A 2023 KFF tracking poll showed Democrats with a 20-point advantage on the question of who voters trust to handle health care affordability and the future of Obamacare.
And in Gallup polls stretching back to the 1990s, voters routinely pick Democratic presidential candidates over Republicans on the question of who’d better handle health care, often by double-digit margins.
Democrats, who were already poised to make overall affordability a central tenet of their midterm message, are aware that they have the upper hand on health care. And in competitive congressional districts, Democrats are already embracing health care as a top issue, telling MSNBC there is real concern from their constituents.
Rep. Tom Suozzi, D-N.Y., who is one of 13 Democrats representing a district that Trump won in 2024, told MSNBC that people list health care as “one of the biggest concerns.”
“And they list affordability as being their No. 1 biggest concern,” Suozzi said.
But unlike affordability, Democrats actually have an advantage on the health care issue, and they could use that debate to make inroads on those other economic messages.
For instance, Republicans have repeatedly said they “strengthened” Medicaid through their reconciliation bill, after cutting $1.1 trillion in funding from the program over the next decade.
Democrats could turn the GOP’s words against them, arguing to voters that when they say they’re making health care better — or improving inflation, or aiding the economy — the data doesn’t back up their claims; just look at what Republicans said about “strengthening” Medicaid.
Democrats need to net just a few seats this cycle to win control of the House, which would allow them to place a major check on the Trump administration.
“Millions of people are seeing their health care costs more than double because of Republicans,” Viet Shelton, a spokesman for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said in a statement. “Their obsession with gutting Americans’ health care is going to cost them the House majority.”
A handful of Republicans recognize that health care is a major messaging problem for their party. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., for example, told MSNBC it’s a “tough political issue all the time, and usually Republicans end up on the downside of that issue.”
Still, many Republicans think it’s no fait accompli that Democrats will always perform better on the issue — with some Republicans arguing in interviews with MSNBC that the subsidies at the heart of the shutdown debate demonstrate that Obamacare isn’t working.
Asked whether she thinks Republicans can flip the historical trend on health care, Capito was hopeful.









