
Fiscal Challenges and Political Headwinds
One of the biggest unanswered questions surrounding Hawley’s proposal is how it would be paid for. A broadly available $25,000-per-person medical deduction could result in hundreds of billions of dollars in lost federal revenue, depending on participation levels.
So far, the bill does not specify:
- Whether the deduction would be capped at the household level
- Whether income limits would apply
- What spending cuts or tax increases would offset the lost revenue
That fiscal uncertainty makes the bill a difficult lift politically, especially after the already expensive 2025 tax package.
On Capitol Hill, Democrats remain focused on extending ACA subsidies rather than shifting relief into the tax-deduction system. For them, the priority is preventing premium shock in 2026 and maintaining affordable coverage for lower-income and middle-income families.
Republicans, meanwhile, are divided. Some support deduction-based solutions that emphasize individual responsibility and tax relief. Others worry about the scale and cost of the proposal.
As a result, Hawley’s plan faces major legislative hurdles:
- Committee approval
- Budget scoring
- Revenue offsets
- Partisan negotiation
- Reconciliation with broader health care policy goals
For now, the proposal remains in the early conceptual phase rather than a fully developed legislative package.