Even though most ACA enrollees/would-be enrollees have made their 2026 enrollment decisions assuming the expanded premium subsidies are not going to be renewed, the renewal of those subsidies is not entirely dead. Last week the House narrowly passed an extension, relying on a discharge petition and 17 Republican Congressmen willing to go against their leadership. Meanwhile, in the Senate, Senator Bernie Moreno (R-OH), of all people, is leading an effort to come up with a bill to expand them as well.

Too many of us are Oliver. Credit: GIPHY
Whether it
will eventually get passed is uncertain, as is how/when it might be reconciled
with the House bill, and the President might
just veto whatever extension might manage to emerge. The expanded subsidies
aren’t dead yet, they’re just “mostly dead,” as Miracle Max would say.
The
seeming indifference to the concerns of over twenty million ACA enrollees is appalling,
but in character. This is an Administration and a Republican Congress that doesn’t
like SNAP, Medicaid, school lunches, or aid to starving people in Third World countries,
among other things. If you’re poor, they think, too bad; get a job, or a better
job, and pull yourself up yourself. No handouts.
If they
were against federal subsidies generally, out of fiscal prudence or other guiding
principles, I could respect it. I wouldn’t agree with it, but it’d at least be
intellectually honest. The trouble is, they’re not against subsidies per se;
they just don’t like them going to poor people. I.e., the ones who need them
most.
What set
me off on this was a ProPublica/High
Country News investigation into grazing
on public lands. If you live in the East you probably don’t think much about
either grazing or public lands, but if you live in the West you are probably
very familiar with both. Almost
50% of land in Western states is federally owned. It ranges from 85% in
Nevada to 4% in North Dakota. Almost half of California is federal land. You
might be forgiven if you assume federal lands must be national parks, but they
are small relative to land managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), the
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS), and the U.S. Forest Service (USFS).
OK, that’s eye-opening, but if it helps a bunch of ranchers who are struggling to survive, maybe that’s not so bad; ranching goes back to frontier days and has a certain cowboy appeal. Unfortunately, that stereotype isn’t quite true. ProPublica found:
A small number of wealthy individuals and corporations manage most livestock on public lands. Roughly two-thirds of the grazing on BLM acreage is controlled by just 10% of ranchers, our analysis found. And on Forest Service land, the top 10% of permittees control more than 50% of grazing. Among the largest ranchers are billionaires like Stan Kroenke and Rupert Murdoch, as well as mining companies and public utilities.
To be fair,
there are a large number of small ranching operators who also take advantage of
grazing on federal land; they’re just not the operations who do most of the
grazing.
As if the
rich ranchers weren’t already benefiting, the Trump Administration wants to
increase subsidies and reduce oversight. But of course it does. Instead of
being a protector of public lands, BLM has turned into a facilitator of their exploitation.
Current and former BLM employees told ProPublica
about the political pressure that was applied whenever they tried to do
anything that might be considered “anti-grazing.”
It’s not just ranchers. We like to think of family farmers working their land, and we provide tens of billions in aid to farmers, but, according to the Environmental Working Group:
…the vast majority of farmers do not benefit from federal farm subsidy programs and most of the subsidies go to the largest and most financially secure farm operations. Small commodity farmers qualify for a mere pittance, while producers of meat, f[r]uits, and vegetables are almost completely left out of the subsidy game (i.e. they can sign up for subsidized crop insurance and often receive federal disaster payments).Meanwhile, the Trump Administration brags about how it “is making major strides in putting America’s public lands to work for the American people,” by which it means if you want to drill for oil or gas, mine for coal, tear down forests, while paying little and not worrying about environmental concerns, you’re in luck. But by “American people” it means “rich American people.”
Similarly,
subsidies that go to the U.S. fossil fuel industry are difficult to pin down,
but a 2025
analysis by Oil Change International estimated them at $31b annually,
double the amount in 2017. And that was before the “Big, Beautiful Bill” added
even further to the subsidies.
Yes, perhaps
the expanded ACA credits perhaps were expanded a little too much, and, yes, there
may be some fraud in the program. But to throw the baby out with the bathwater by
simply allowing them to expire is draconian. The estimated $30b in annual costs
for the subsidies is not trivial, but I’d rather spend it ensuring millions of
people can get/keep health coverage than giving it to rich ranchers, farmers,
or oil companies.
















