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America’s Families are Facing a Healthcare Affordability Crisis

What you need to know:

Across the country, working families are struggling to keep up with skyrocketing healthcare costs, which are set to double next year and Pennsylvanians are feeling the pain.2

Earlier this year, Republicans in Congress passed the biggest cuts to Medicaid in U.S. history, hurting a life-saving program that millions of families depend on for care.

Why would they make these cuts and hurt working families? To pay for another tax break for billionaires.

Cutting through the noise on healthcare costs:

In this special issue, In Union will give you the facts on healthcare costs. We’re shining a light on sky-high prices, unaffordable prescriptions, and unexpected bills that hit working families. We must lower our out-of-pocket expenses and ensure quality care is within reach for every Pennsylvania family, not just a lucky few.

HEALTHCARE CRISIS

WHAT’S AT STAKE FOR PENNSYLVANIA’S WORKING FAMILIES?

Healthcare in America costs too much. Families at all income levels struggle to afford care. Instead of helping, Congress keeps cutting funding for the programs we all rely on. They do this to give huge tax breaks to billionaires who don’t need them.

Earlier this year, the Trump administration and Republicans in Congress made the biggest cuts to Medicaid in U.S. history. These cuts hurt healthcare and raised costs for millions of families—all to fund tax breaks for the very rich.1

Now, they are going even further. They refuse to extend the premium tax credits that help working families pay for health insurance. This means Pennsylvanians will have to pay much more for their care.

Under the Republican plan…

Healthcare costs are doubling. Across the country, health insurance costs are going up by an average of 114%. In Pennsylvania, people using Pennie—the state’s health insurance marketplace— would pay an average of 82% more. Those with the lowest incomes would see even bigger increases.2

Millions are losing coverage. Almost 5 million Americans are losing their health insurance, leaving them without access to doctors, medicine, or emergency care. 270,000 Pennsylvanians could lose their coverage entirely because of higher prices.3

Older Pennsylvanians are hit the hardest. People close to Medicare age would face huge price increases, making healthcare even harder to afford.4

HOW DID YOUR MEMBER OF CONGRESS VOTE

Your member of Congress, Rep. Ryan Mackenzie, voted to cut Medicaid and allow healthcare costs to go up.5 Every day, families struggle with rising costs for doctors, medicine, and life-saving care.

Tell Rep. Mackenzie you want him to stand up for you and your community. Call him at (202) 225-6411 or email him on his website: mackenzie.house.gov/ contact/email-me

HOW MUCH COULD YOUR PREMIUM GO UP?

Pennie, Pennsylvania’s ACA marketplace, has resources to show what will happen if the enhanced premium tax credits expire. For a working family earning about $55,000 a year, premiums could go up by almost $2,000 a year. (You can learn more on their website: pennie.com/affordability)

Congress has a choice: protect these savings so families can afford care, or let them expire, forcing people to choose between health coverage and other needs. Speak up and tell Congress to keep costs down.

� (202) 225-6411 ✉ mackenzie.house.gov/contact/email-me

� Sign up for Town Hall updates at mackenzie.house.gov/contact/town-hall-rsvp Tell your member of Congress, Rep. Ryan Mackenzie, that you don’t want your healthcare costs to rise.

PENNSYLVANIA VOICES

Pennsylvanians on how healthcare cuts affect their lives

“My wife and I are getting close to retirement. Our health insurance premium is currently capped at $586 a month, which stretches our budget thin. But if Congress lets these tax credits expire, we’ll face a monthly bill of at least $2,800. That’s a burden no family can afford, and it jeopardizes our health and our future.”

—Name, City

“I’m a nurse in Carbon County, and our local hospitals are struggling to stay open. If another one closes, families here will lose access to urgent care and life-saving services when they need them most.”

—Name, City

ACA Marketplace Premium Payments Would More than Double on Average Next Year if Enhanced Premium Tax Credits Expire KFF, 9/30/2025

Insurance costs to soar in Pa. without congressional action Insurance News Net, 9/18/2025

The Peterson Center on Healthcare and KFF teamed up to show how our healthcare system is really working—both in quality and in cost. Their easy online tool helps you estimate your family’s medical costs and understand where your money goes. Learn more: healthsystemtracker.org/ household-health-spending-calculator

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