Health insurers do not support a new Trump administration proposal aimed at allowing health plans to circumvent certain ObamaCare rules.

In a statement Friday, America’s Health Insurance Plans, the largest insurance trade group in the country, said it was “concerned that the changes proposed would lead to higher prices and weaker consumer protections in the small group and individual markets, where nearly 40 million Americans get their coverage.”

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Under the proposal released Thursday, small businesses and self-employed individuals would be allowed to join together in what are known as “association health plans."

Those associations would be allowed to purchase cheaper health insurance not subject to some of the key ObamaCare consumer protections, like the requirement to cover 10 “essential health benefits,” which include mental health, substance abuse treatment, maternity care and prescription drugs.

The administration said the proposal could make insurance available for up to 11 million people who lack employer-sponsored coverage.

AHIP said it’s concerned that association plans would be less likely to cover higher-risk populations, which would cause an imbalance in the risk pool, and premiums would rise. AHIP is also concerned that the lack of regulation of association health insurance plans would create an uneven playing field in the traditional ObamaCare-regulated marketplace.