The truth about America’s health care crisis is glaring—and it’s not from lack of trying by Republicans. A stunning 70% of Americans now say the health care system has big problems or is in a full-blown crisis. Yet Democrats continue to stoke chaos with failed policies addicted to government handouts, while the GOP pushes for real solutions that put power and choice back in the hands of Americans.
Let’s be clear: the mounting public anger isn’t just about access—it’s about the outrageous costs. Nearly one-third of voters name skyrocketing expenses as the top health care issue, blowing past concerns about coverage or obesity. That’s no surprise when average premiums are poised to more than double if the expensive and unsustainable Obamacare subsidies vanish at year’s end. Democrats want to chain America to these cash-guzzling programs for three more years, showing zero interest in fixing the root problems that drive costs through the roof.
Healthcare costs are going to be a dominant issue in the midterm elections and this new @Gallup poll should be read by every Democratic candidate and operative
70% believe healthcare is in "crisis" or a "major problem"
Cost Leads Americans' Top-of-Mind Healthcare Concerns… pic.twitter.com/SKBeKgaBng
— John Anzalone (@JohnAnzo) December 15, 2025
Meanwhile, Republicans in the House have laid out a sensible plan aiming to lower premiums and increase options without doubling down on failed liberal experiments. The GOP isn’t trying to prop up crumbling socialist schemes; they’re tackling the real drivers behind health care inflation—massive government interference and one-size-fits-all mandates that crush competition and innovation. Speaker Mike Johnson’s team refuses to play the political game of extending subsidies that only fuel dependency and waste—a bold move that should earn applause, not Pelosi-party backlash.
Of course, Democrats have no interest in bipartisan progress. They slammed the GOP plan without offering a workable alternative, preferring to keep the status quo that lines the pockets of globalist cronies and Big Pharma lobbyists. Their impotent promise to quietly extend Obamacare handouts is a bandage on a bullet wound, ignoring that Americans want less government, not more. The fact that nearly two-thirds of Republicans and over 80% of Democrats alike admit the system is in “major trouble” shows that voters know both parties have a lot to answer for—but it’s the left’s reckless spending and authoritarian dictates that made this mess in the first place.
If Washington actually cared about fixing health care, it’d listen to the voters instead of their special interest donors. Americans want affordability, choice, and accountability—not endless “solutions” that saddle them with crushing debt and subpar care. Republicans have opened the door to genuine reform. It’s time for Congress to walk through it and stop playing these political games. Otherwise, Americans will keep paying the price—literally.
How long will the country suffer while socialist insiders hoard power and cash, pretending they’re the saviors of America’s health care? The people see through the smoke and mirrors. So the question remains: when will leadership stop the madness and put American patients first?

