Mayors sue over Trump’s efforts to restrict Obamacare signups

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"Democratic Mayors Challenge Trump Administration's Changes to Obamacare Enrollment Rules"

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The Trump administration's recent alterations to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) enrollment process have sparked a legal backlash from Democratic mayors across the United States. The new rules, introduced last month, significantly shorten the enrollment period for ACA coverage from the previous Biden-era extension, which had facilitated record levels of enrollment. Under the new framework, the enrollment window will only be open from November 1 to December 15 in 2026. This change is anticipated to affect approximately 2 million individuals, nearly 10% of those currently enrolled, leading to increased numbers of uninsured Americans. The mayors of major cities, including Baltimore, Chicago, and Columbus, have filed a lawsuit against the Department of Health and Human Services, asserting that these regulations will exacerbate the issue of uninsurance and place additional strain on local government resources and services. They argue that the rules, which include stricter income verification and a new fee for automatic re-enrollment in free plans, effectively undermine the ACA's original purpose of providing affordable health coverage to all citizens.

The legal challenge is bolstered by support from advocacy groups such as Doctors for America and Main Street Alliance, highlighting concerns over the implications of the new policies. HHS officials, however, have defended the changes, claiming they are necessary to enhance oversight and ensure that taxpayer subsidies are allocated to those who genuinely qualify, framing the modifications as measures to safeguard the ACA marketplace. Critics, including the mayors and their legal representatives, contend that the rules were implemented without sufficient public input and will lead to increased health care costs and reduced access to insurance for millions of Americans. Despite the Trump administration's long-standing opposition to the ACA, which it has characterized as flawed, the program had seen significant enrollment gains under the Biden administration, largely attributed to the financial incentives provided in recent legislation. The ongoing conflict over these health care policies underscores the broader partisan divides surrounding health care reform in the United States.

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NewTrump administrationrules that give millions of people a shorter timeframe to sign up for the Affordable Care Act’s health care coverage are facing a legal challenge from Democratic mayors around the country.

The rules, rolled out last month, reverse a Biden-era effort to expand access to the Affordable Care Act’s health insurance, commonly called “Obamacare” or the ACA. The previous Democratic administration expanded the enrollment window for the coverage, which led to record enrollment.

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) rolled out a series of new restrictions for Obamacare late last month, just as Congress was weighing a major bill that will decrease enrollment in the health care program that Donald Trump has scorned for years. As many as 2 million people – nearly 10% – are expected to lose coverage from the health department’s new rules.

The mayors of Baltimore, Chicago and Columbus, Ohio, sued the federal health department on Tuesday over the rules, saying they will result in more uninsured residents and overburden city services.

“Cloaked in the pretense of government efficiency and fraud prevention, the 2025 Rule creates numerous barriers to affordable insurance coverage, negating the purpose of the ACA to extend affordable health coverage to all Americans, and instead increasing the population of underinsured and uninsured Americans,” the filing alleges.

Two liberal advocacy groups – Doctors for America and Main Street Alliance – joined in on the complaint.

The federal health department announced a series of changes late last month to the ACA. It will shorten the enrollment period for the federal marketplace by a month, limiting it to 1 November to 15 December in 2026. Income verification checks will become more stringent and a $5 fee will be tacked on for some people who automatically re-enroll in a free plan.

Insurers will also be able to deny coverage to people who have not paid their premiums on past plans. The rules also bar roughly 100,000 immigrants who were brought to the US as children from signing up for the coverage.

The new rules “safeguard the future of the marketplace”, and will lower premiums for those who remain in the program, HHS spokesman Andrew Nixon said in a statement.

“The rule closes loopholes, strengthens oversight, and ensures taxpayer subsidies go to those who are truly eligible – that’s not controversial, it’s common sense,” Nixon said.

But the three mayors argue that the polices were introduced without an adequate public comment period on the policies.

“This unlawful rule will force families off their health insurance and raise costs on millions of Americans. This does nothing to help people and instead harms Americans’ health and safety across our country,” said Skye Perryman, the president of Democracy Forward, which is representing the coalition of plaintiffs in the lawsuit.

The lawsuit does not challenge the Trump administration’s restriction on immigrants signing up for the coverage.

The Biden administration saw gains in Obamacare enrollment as a major success of the Democratic president’s term, noting that a record 24 million people signed up for the coverage, thanks to generous tax breaks offered through the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act.

But the program has been a target of Trump, who has said it is riddled with problems that make the coverage unaffordable for many without large subsidies. Enrollment in the program dipped during his first term in office.

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Source: The Guardian