Hi, I have enjoyed this post, it put me to think! It is the kind of posting we need here in the net.
U(1)xU(1)xU(1)? It is probably a mistake due to the fast answer, or perhaps a purposeful example... Of course when the group is not a subgroup of SU(2)xU(1), I do not expect the Higgs to produce it. And I do not see how U(1)^3 can be a subgroup, please someone correct me here if I am wrong. On other hand, I am open to mechanisms breaking into objects which are not a group (eg a q-group) but can not remember any.
I am a bit surprised by the other example, that SU(2)x1 can not be produced via a Higgs mechanism. Are we telling that it is a very particular circumstance or that the Higgs can not break abelian groups? This can not be very general, because SU(2)xU(1) can break to U(1) and also totally, so it is is a sort of counterexample where U(1) can be totally broken.
On other hand, I think we can get two massless gauge bosons, can we? The breaking of SU(2) into U(1) was the theme of Glashow-Giorgi 1972 model (not the GUT one), so the same trick should drive SU(2)xU(1) down to U(1)xU(1).
Hmm we are answering the OP of the thread: the non minimal standard model accommodates massive photons?!