Health Care Affordability

One agenda item for Republicans in 2026 is to make life more affordable.
We recognize that high prices on everything from groceries to gas make it harder to purchase a home, raise a family and send your kids to school.
These rises in the costs of living were fueled in large part by the high levels of inflation we saw during the Biden-Harris years.
Under President Biden, inflation was rampant, at one point hitting 9.1%. This was the highest inflation rate since the President Carter years.
According to FactCheck.org, consumer prices rose 21.5%, gasoline rose 31% and home prices rose 37.4% under Biden-Harris.
Meanwhile, private sector growth took a hit as real wages adjusted for inflation fell.
As a result, and to the frustration of many, Americans are paying more for everything.
Given the Biden-Harris economic setbacks, President Trump and Republicans in Congress are working to reverse these Biden-Harris inflationary pressures, tame the cost-of-living crisis and provide more affordability for Americans.
One area of my focus as Health Subcommittee Chairman is to lower the costs of health care.
There are many root causes to the increases in health care costs. Some trace back to before Biden-Harris.
One reason patients see rises in health care costs, which are outpacing inflation, is due to President Obama’s signature health care policy, the Affordable Care Act (ACA), also known as Obamacare.
Obama pledged at the time, “I will sign a universal health care bill into law by the end of my first term as president that will cover every American and cut the cost of a typical family’s premium by up to $2,500 a year.”
PolitiFact found this to be a broken campaign promise.
In fact, as you all know, insurance rates have continued to climb and outpace general inflation as measured by the consumer price index.
Further, Obamacare spurred consolidation in the health care marketplace, gutting competition.
In a recent Health Subcommittee hearing with health insurance company leaders, I detailed the impacts of dwindling competition and low transparency on patients in Virginia’s Ninth District.
When it comes to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace, a 2017 study by the Kaiser Family Foundation reported on U.S. communities at risk of having no insurers on the marketplace. Virginia had the most number of counties at risk! Fortunately, at this time, every Virginia Ninth District locality does have at least one provider.
This is further proof that Obamacare ACA plans have weakened competition, thereby failing to deliver the lower health care costs that were promised to American patients when Obamacare was signed into law in 2010.
During the hearing, I made the case that we need to strive to have more competitive insurance plan options that reward quality and focus on affordability, access and outcomes.
Additionally, the big insurance companies own a large share of the health care marketplace. In fact, their networks either own or exert control over pharmacies and Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs).
With such a large share of the marketplace, these big insurance companies wield enough power to influence the cost of health care, raising your costs.
In a separate hearing, my Subcommittee brought in PBMs and others involved in the prescription drug supply chain.
The predatory practices of some PBMs appear to be partially responsible for the increases in prescription drug costs.
Some of these PBM behaviors hopefully will be reined in thanks to recently passed legislation and a settlement between the Federal Trade Commission and a major PBM. These developments will encourage greater transparency with the hopes of lowering costs.
During the drug supply hearing, one of the issues I raised was that the three largest PBMs control roughly 80% of the pharmaceutical marketplace! All three are owned by insurance companies.
This anti-competitive structure limits the ability of pharmaceutical manufacturers and pharmacies to deliver more affordable drugs to patients.
There also seemed to be agreement across industries and political party lines that more competition and more choices helps improve health care affordability, and a consolidation of the marketplace does just the opposite!
As I lead the Health Subcommittee forward to address health care affordability, I will continue to advocate for more competition and more transparency in American health care.
I believe these reforms will fix some of the failures in our health care system and ultimately lower health care costs.
To make life more affordable for American patients, change to the health care status quo is needed. I am fighting in Congress to make these changes possible.
If you have questions, concerns, or comments, feel free to contact my office. You can call my Abingdon office at 276-525-1405 or my Christiansburg office at 540-381-5671. To reach my office via email, please visit my website at https://morgangriffith.house.gov/.








March 15, 2026 @ 8:39 am
As long as people like you are in charge we don’t have A CHANCE!!!!! Can you just go away please, I will vote AGAINST you and everyone who supports trump!!!!!! Trump is of the devil!!!!!
March 14, 2026 @ 4:49 pm
Can you defend anything you are doing right now without blaming Biden or Barack Hussein Obama as the president likes to say?
The Afffordable Care Act needs improvements? Okay, improve it. Improving it is not cutting off people from healthcare and leaving them with nothing. Congress has good government paid healthcare care. We pay a lot of tax money and we deserve good government paid health care.
March 14, 2026 @ 12:49 pm
Morgan
too little too late.All of a sudden we are hearing from you.
March 14, 2026 @ 12:10 pm
Republicans are the entire reason we can’t have affordable healthcare in this country. Full stop.
They always seem to have money for wars, but not for Americans who only want affordable healthcare or food assistance.
This is nothing more than a pathetic attempt to try to convince us that Republicans actually care about affordable healthcare, and somehow Democrats are responsible. We are not idiots.
March 14, 2026 @ 9:48 am
No words to this diatribe. Feeble attempt at selling affordability. I go to the grocery store. I just spent $1400 to keep my 16 year old Honda on the road. The barber has increased prices because his costs have gone up.
Saying Biden- Harris for current failures only works on people who don’t accept facts. Or watch Faux Entertainment all day. I walk out of any business playing that propaganda.
Reality is flag draped boxes arriving for a “little trip” that no one can explain what led to this. Six months ago nuclear capabilities were decimated and now they are really decimated. A school was “wrongly labeled” and blew up over 100 little girls and women.
Today on the news a mother is overcome with grief because her only child was killed. All six crew members of a KC-135 refueling aircraft who were supporting operations against Iran are dead.
We are paying more at the grocery store and even more for gas. Which was never under $2 this 14 month period. A healthcare desert in the 9th district and it is expensive.
Biden-Harris announced new manufacturing. All of that was cut. Where are the new companies? Coal and oil are supposed to be the new money makers for us. When are the coal furnaces going into all of the homes and businesses like the good old days?