[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 140 (Thursday, October 1, 2009)]
[House]
[Pages H10440-H10445]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                           HEALTH CARE REFORM

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of 
January 6, 2009, the gentleman from Georgia (Mr. Gingrey) is recognized 
for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
  Mr. GINGREY of Georgia. Mr. Speaker, I thank you, and I thank my 
leadership for allowing me to take this Special Order hour to discuss 
what has certainly become the most important issue that has been going 
on in this Congress over these last couple of months, and that is the 
issue of health care reform or, as the Democratic leadership and the 
President himself have rephrased that now, reform of our health 
insurance industry, rather than reform of our health care system. But 
we're going to spend a little time, Mr. Speaker, talking about where we 
are with regard to this and what are some of the alternatives. 
Particularly from our side of the aisle, we are often criticized, I 
think unjustly, about being the party of opposition without having any 
sufficient alternative ideas to present. In other words, the accusation 
of being ``the party of no.''
  My colleague from Georgia, Mr. Speaker, is here with me on the floor 
today, this afternoon, and he and I laugh about that a little bit. We 
both agree, yeah, we are the party of ``know''--it's spelled K-N-O-W. 
So I would like to take this opportunity to share with our colleagues 
on both sides of the aisle just what it is we do know and what are some 
of those suggestions with regard to health care reform or, indeed, 
health insurance reform, that

[[Page H10441]]

the minority, loyal minority wants to present.
  We want to make sure that our President, who said his door is wide 
open as he spoke to the Nation from right here, from your seat, Mr. 
Speaker, a couple of weeks ago, saying, Look, if anybody--whether it's 
the Republican Party or doctors out across the Nation or some of the 
many men and women who have attended these town hall meetings 
throughout the month of August--If you've got ideas, bring them to me. 
My door is always open.
  Certainly we have tried to do that, Mr. Speaker, in the way of 
writing letters, making calls to his staff and to say to the President, 
We do have some good ideas, Mr. President. In fact, just today within 
the last hour and a half, a group of physicians from across this 
country--they call themselves the Million Med March group, were here 
out on the Mall, talking about this be very issue and bringing ideas. 
Yes, there were some physician Members of the House with them to speak 
to the group that had a symbol. It is a grassroots effort, and there 
are lots of ideas, Mr. Speaker, Mr. President, Mr. Majority Leader. I 
say to Ms. Pelosi, the Speaker of the House, and to Senator Reid, 
Senate majority leader, we have lots of good ideas, and we want an 
opportunity to be heard.
  So we are going to take this next 45 minutes or so to talk about some 
of these ideas. My friend from Georgia is not only a colleague here and 
a fellow Georgian but also a fellow physician. And while I specialize, 
Mr. Speaker, in OB/GYN, Dr. Paul Broun from Athens, Georgia, his 
specialty is family medicine, primary care. You talk about somebody 
whose voice needs to be heard, and I hope the President will also 
acknowledge the fact that Dr. Broun has some great ideas. I will yield 
to him right now and hear some of those ideas as we colloquy and so 
forth.
  Dr. Broun, thank you for being here, and I would like to yield to 
you.
  Mr. BROUN of Georgia. Dr. Gingrey, thank you so much for yielding to 
me. I, indeed, went down to the park where all these physicians were. I 
know Dr. Gingrey and our colleague Dr. Tom Price, also from Georgia, 
was at that same meeting with the physicians. This was a group of 
physicians from all over the country that are very concerned about 
ObamaCare, about the direction that they perceive that the Congress is 
going. They see H.R. 3200, the ObamaCare bill here in the U.S. House, 
as well as the bill that Max Baucus has over in the U.S. Senate, as 
being a tremendous attack on their ability to practice medicine, to be 
able to make the decisions along with their patients of how health care 
is delivered within their offices and how they can deliver surgery, 
prescriptions, and the tests and procedures that they need.
  I think they're exactly right. Dr. Gingrey, I know you spoke with 
them before I did. But Mr. Speaker, when I was down there, I spoke to 
these physicians, and I told them that they and their patients around 
this country are what's going to stop this steamroller of socialized 
medicine that's going on here in the House of Representatives. I 
reminded them that if we can generate enough grassroots support all 
over this country to ask particularly the leadership here in the House 
and the Senate as well as the President to open up this process, to 
listen to all of the second opinions that Dr. Gingrey and others are 
putting forward.
  I know you are going to talk a little while tonight about your health 
care bill of rights and the 10 Prescriptions for a Healthy America. I 
applaud you, Dr. Gingrey, for bringing this forward, but the only thing 
that's going to slow down this process of the Federal Government taking 
over the health care system is the ``We the People.'' The Constitution 
of the United States starts off with three very powerful words, ``We 
the People.'' Up here we're supposed to be representatives, not rulers, 
and we, the people, need to stand up and say, Whoa, this is an issue 
that is too important to rush through. We should not have any 
deadlines. The Speaker and the President have talked about trying to 
get a bill on his desk before Thanksgiving. This is too complex of an 
issue to rush it.
  What we, as physicians here in Congress, are trying to do is to offer 
a second opinion. Actually, we've got many opinions that Republicans 
have introduced. Dr. Gingrey, you have been very instrumental in 
fostering the idea of health information technology, digitizing 
electronic medical records and that sort of thing, which would help 
save money. We have to find a way to lower the cost. In my private 
practice of general medicine, I couldn't afford to buy health 
information technology for my patients. We've got to lower the cost of 
that, but we have got to lower the cost of everything in health care.
  The Republicans have many ideas. I, as well as you and the other 
people on our side, want to see us open the process so that all the 
ideas are put on the table, and unfortunately, neither the President 
nor Speaker Pelosi are allowing that to happen. The American people 
just need to stand up and say ``no'' to ObamaCare. Let's put these 
ideas all on the table. Let's discuss them, find ways to lower the cost 
of health care without creating a big Federal debt, which ObamaCare, 
H.R. 3200, will do. The President said it wouldn't, but that was not 
true. He also said that it would not give free health care to illegal 
aliens, and that is not true. A lot of things that he said that night 
were not true. In fact, the only person who said the truth that night 
in that speech was Joe Wilson, our dear colleague from South Carolina.
  But the thing is, the American people are in charge. That's what I 
told the doctors, Mr. Speaker, when I was down there is that the 
physicians in this country and everybody who is concerned about where 
we're going in health care--and particularly the elderly--need to say 
no to this H.R. 3200, which is going to be disastrous for everybody. 
And let's open up the process, and in a bipartisan way, in a bicameral 
way use the House and the Senate together, let's find some commonsense 
market-based solutions that lower the costs for health care.
  And in doing so, let the doctor-patient relationship dictate how 
health care decisions are made, not through some government bureaucrat, 
as in the House bill right now. The ObamaCare bill here in the House 
will put a government bureaucrat between a doctor and a patient. Let's 
find ways of lowering the cost of medicine in the drugstore. Let's find 
ways of doing the things that make sense economically without stealing 
our grandchildren's future. We can do that, and we can do that in a 
bipartisan way if the leader of this House and the leader of the Senate 
would just open it up and let us do so.
  Dr. Gingrey, I applaud your effort, because you've been a leader, 
right on the forefront in this process of trying to offer second 
opinions. You've been here week after week, as well as many others. A 
lot of physicians in the House have been here on the floor week after 
week offering second opinions. Republicans are the party of K-N-O-W. We 
know how to solve the health care financing crisis here in America. We 
know how to solve the energy problems in America and make America 
energy independent without having this huge energy tax that the cap-
and-trade--I call it the tax-and-cap bill--will put on the poor and 
elderly, those on limited incomes who will really be hurt by that 
energy bill. We know how to stimulate the economy without creating a 
bigger government and without bailing out Wall Street. We need to bail 
out Main Street.
  So we are the party of know. We have got about 10 physicians and 
medical personnel who are a part of the Republican Doctors Caucus, and 
we are offering many second opinions, really. So Dr. Gingrey, I applaud 
your effort. I applaud everything that you're doing. You're the 
chairman of the House Doctors Caucus on the Republican side, and I am 
honored to be one of your two cochairmen on that group. The American 
people should know, need to know, that there are alternatives beside 
the ObamaCare bill, and the American people need to stand up and say, 
Let's do this in a bipartisan way. Let's stop all the partisanship, the 
bickering, the discord and all the things that are going on in this 
country, and let's do it so that people can manage their own health 
care along with their doctors.
  Dr. Gingrey, I will yield back, and I thank you for what you're 
doing.
  Mr. GINGREY of Georgia. I thank the gentleman from Georgia.
  Mr. Speaker, Dr. Broun brings up a couple of points that I think we 
need to elaborate on. He mentioned two things.

[[Page H10442]]

He mentioned the need for electronic medical records, and he also 
mentioned the need for medical liability reform. Mr. Speaker, these are 
two things that the President has said. In fact, in his speech to the 
Nation a couple of weeks ago from this Chamber, he mentioned both 
things. Of course there is money set aside in the stimulus package, the 
American Recovery Act 2009, toward electronic medical records. But what 
physicians know which maybe a lot of Members of Congress don't know, 
don't have any real way of knowing, is what are the impediments to 
practicing medicine and to getting fully integrated in an electronic 
medical records system.
  Even though doctors realize that it would save time, it would save 
money--most importantly though, it would save lives with regard to 
electronic medical records--it's something that's very expensive. It's 
like trying to--you know, your old jalopy car is falling apart, and you 
need a new car. Let's make that analogous to this old medical records, 
keeping paper records, charts where records are falling out all over 
the place, and you can't find things in a timely manner when the 
patient maybe comes in with an emergency condition.
  That's the old car. The new car, of course, would be a laptop or a 
notebook computer that you go into the exam room or go over to the 
emergency room, and you've got it, and all of a sudden you just with a 
punch of a key, you have that entire record of the patient. Maybe the 
patient happens to be a patient of an associate or a partner that 
you're covering for. But that information is there, and it's accurate. 
Well, that's the new car. Unfortunately the cost of the new car, the 
sticker shock, a lot of times is going to keep people driving the old 
jalopy that's polluting the Nation and putting people at risk--in this 
case, patients at risk.
  I have introduced a bill for 2 or 3 years in a row that would 
incentivize even a small country doctor. Maybe he's got a partner or 
she's got a partner or two. But it's a small group, and they're seeing 
75, 80 patients a day each. They can't afford to come up with $30,000, 
$40,000 per doctor to purchase an electronic medical records system, a 
computer, the hardware, the software, the maintenance program. They 
know--they're convinced that over a period of time that it's the thing 
to do and that eventually it would pay for itself. But by golly, they 
just can't afford that front-end sticker shock.

                              {time}  1545

  So we are, Mr. Speaker, continuing to introduce H.R. 1087 that would 
give them a break under the Tax Code. No free grant necessarily, but 
let them write off the expense in the first year to help them be able 
to do what Mr. President and what the majority party and minority party 
and all the doctors in the House and two in the Senate fully agree that 
we need to do: fully integrate electronic medical records by the year 
2014. Indeed, former President Bush said the same thing. So that's an 
area in which we have full agreement.
  Mr. Speaker, I really study this. I follow this. I go to the HIMSS 
meetings on an annual basis and usually speak to that group, the 
Healthcare Information Management Systems Society. It's an organization 
of people that are in this industry, in this business. And I know from 
talking with them that we're talking about maybe $150 billion-a-year 
savings because you cut down on medical errors, you cut down on 
duplication of not ordering very, very expensive things like CAT scans 
and MRIs; and, even more importantly, of course, not making the mistake 
of prescribing a medication that would be contrary to the patient's 
health based on other medications that they're having or conditions 
that they are suffering from. So this is something where we could save 
a lot of money. You're talking about $120 billion a year, Mr. Speaker.
  Maybe if we did that, then we wouldn't have to try to pay for this 
health care reform, or is it health insurance reform, by taking $500 
billion out of the Medicare system and literally gutting Medicare 
Advantage, a choice of fully 20 percent of our seniors.
  Some 10 million of the 45 million Medicare recipients choose Medicare 
Advantage because for them it's better. They're able to go in and have 
an annual physical. They're able to have a lot of screening procedures 
done that are covered under Medicare Advantage and that are not covered 
under your typical Medicare fee-for-service.
  There is a follow-up program usually provided by the insurance 
companies that offer Medicare Advantage where within a few days of your 
appointment, a nurse, a nurse practitioner, or maybe even a doctor 
herself, Mr. Speaker, will call the patient and make sure that they got 
that prescription filled, that they're not having any side effects.
  We keep saying we need to go to a whole new paradigm. That word has 
become kind of trite, but a whole new paradigm where we incentivize our 
health care teams to provide wellness rather than just treat illness. 
It is a more compassionate way to deliver health care, but it also is 
going to save lives and save money.
  So for me to look at these bills that are out there, whether it's 
this 1,200-page bill that I have behind me, H.R. 3200, that has been 
passed by three committees in the House, mainly by the committee that I 
sit on, Energy and Commerce, where we're going to reform the health 
care system by gutting Medicare of $500 billion over 10 years.
  Mr. Speaker, I heard someone, and I believe it was an official of the 
AARP, suggest that, well, you know, this is just a little cut in 
Medicare; $500 billion, with a ``b,'' is a lot of money even for 
Washington, D.C.
  But when you look at what we spend every year on Medicare, I think in 
2008 the total expenditure for Medicare was about $480 billion. Well, 
if you cut that $500 billion over 10 years, do the math, Mr. Speaker. 
It's fairly simple, my colleagues. We're not all math majors, but this 
is arithmetic; this is not calculus. That's something like a 13 or 14 
percent cut every year. Actually, it's closer to a 10 percent cut. But 
it cuts Medicare Advantage about 17 percent a year.
  And 10 percent is a lot. If you don't believe it, ask those who are 
among that group of unemployed in this country right now, those 10 
percent that are without a job. For them it's 100 percent. It's not a 
recession; it's a depression. It's a depression mentally and physically 
and actually.
  So we can do these things like electronic medical records, and we 
could save a lot of money. We don't have to gut Medicare, and we don't 
have to raise taxes $800 billion, $900 billion and, further, cause 
small businessmen and women to lay people off or not hire new employees 
because they just can't afford to.
  And, golly, how many jobs has it been, Mr. Speaker, since we passed 
the economic stimulus package that was going to save the country back 
in February? I think we've lost 2 million jobs since then. And when we 
passed that bill, the unemployment rate was 7 percent, 7.5 percent; and 
now it's 10 percent. We have got real problems here in River City, and 
it's not just the need to reform our health care system. We need to put 
people back to work.
  I heard the President of the United States say we are in a crisis; 
we're losing 14,000 people every day; 14,000 people are losing their 
health insurance. Well, Mr. Speaker, the reason for that is because 
they're losing their jobs. And I think, yes, they have a concern about 
health insurance, but they also have a great concern about feeding 
their children and clothing them and providing shelter for their 
family. And then, of course, let's make sure that they get affordable 
health insurance.
  Again, it's all about priorities. I think that we can do this, and I 
think we can do it without spending $1.5 trillion over the next 10 
years or $2.5 trillion over the next 15 and running up an additional at 
least $250 billion worth of red ink and long-term debt. We can do it by 
adopting electronic medical records.
  We also can save, Mr. Speaker, a tremendous amount of money by 
medical malpractice reform, medical liability reform. The President has 
acknowledged it. He said it to the AMA at their annual meeting in his 
hometown of Chicago back in June. He said it again right from this dais 
2 weeks ago when he spoke to the Nation. He has acknowledged the need. 
He has said, If you've got an idea on either one of these things, 
medical records, medical liability reform, my door is open, I want you 
to call me. I want you to come see me.

[[Page H10443]]

  Well, we are trying, Mr. Speaker and my colleagues, and we will 
continue to try because I believe the President. I take him at his 
word. I'm going to be patient on this. Hope springs eternal because we 
do. It's not just me, but Members on both sides of the aisle, not just 
physician Members but all Members have ideas, and they need to be 
listened to just as in the amendment process that we went through when 
we marked up H.R. 3200.
  Why was every Republican amendment rejected, and why was it done 
almost completely along party lines? That's something the American 
people, Mr. Speaker, want us to get away from. They want us to 
cooperate. It's fine for the President to say that if you don't agree 
with him that you're just bickering and complaining and griping and 
being untruthful. There's no corner on truth by the President of the 
United States or the majority party. Let's all be truthful. And if we 
disagree, that doesn't mean one side is being, shall we say, a serial 
disingenuous person, rather than using more inflammatory language. No, 
it's a fair and honest difference of opinion. And if we come together 
and share those differences of opinion and pick the best of both, then 
we come up with, I think, a bill that the American people can accept.
  Mr. Speaker, these town hall meetings, people all across this 
country, whether they be of the Democratic or Republican persuasion or 
independent voters, whether they are young or old or African American, 
Asian, it doesn't matter. They're United States folks. They are hard 
working and they want and deserve us, their Representatives, to do it 
in a way that helps them, that we are not constantly in gridlock up 
here.

  So, Mr. Speaker, my opportunity today to talk about some of these 
things is heartfelt and it's a commitment, and I know my colleagues on 
both sides of the aisle feel the same way, and we are going to work 
toward this solution.
  Now, I particularly wanted to talk about a second opinion that I 
have. We talk about that in a lot in medicine about getting a second 
opinion and how important it is. Maybe the first opinion is not the 
best opinion. Maybe it is, but oftentimes a second or third opinion, 
you need that. You need that. So the second opinion that I want to talk 
to my colleagues about today, Mr. Speaker, is what I call a Health Care 
Bill of Rights, or, to put it another way, 10 Prescriptions for a 
Healthy America. And this is a bill that I introduced just today, and 
it's H.R. 3700.
  Now, H.R. 3200, here it is. It's about 1,200 pages. The chairman of 
the House Judiciary Committee has been a Member of this body for a long 
time. He still looks young and healthy to me, thank God, but he's been 
here a long time. And he's an attorney. That's his profession. He's not 
a doctor; he's a lawyer. Somebody questioned him about whether or not 
he'd read the whole bill, and he said, I don't know. I mean, I need two 
lawyers to help me read it. And he is a Member of the majority party 
and an attorney himself and I think has been a Member of this body for 
at least 35 years. That's the problem with bills like this.
  Now, my colleagues, I want to hold up for you H.R. 3400. H.R. 3400 is 
a bill that Dr. Tom Price is the original author of, Dr. Price on our 
side of the aisle, an orthopedic surgeon, chairman of the Republican 
Study Committee. And many of us, including myself, cosponsored H.R. 
3400. It's a little bill. It looks like maybe about 260 pages instead 
of 1,200 pages. And it does many things in a way that is economically 
sound, that brings down the cost of health care, that makes health care 
affordable and accessible so that individuals can own their policy and 
the marketplace works, and we don't have any government takeover in 
this bill.
  I want to commend my colleagues to go online, get a copy of this 
bill, read the summary, read the Cliff Notes, whatever, and understand 
that this is just one of, I would say, three or four Republican bills, 
alternatives to H.R. 3200 or the health bill that's come out of the 
Senate, the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee that was 
chaired by Senator Dodd, Chris Dodd, in the absence of Senator Kennedy 
while he was struggling with his illness. But this is a good bill, and 
I think the President needs to look at it and needs to consider it and 
keep that door wide open.
  But what I am going to talk about in regard to H.R. 3700 is it's 
really a statement of principles. But it's a bill, and as I say, we 
just introduced it today. Mr. Speaker, I have it on a little card 
almost like a contract. Well, we call it 10 Prescriptions for a Healthy 
America or the Health Care Bill of Rights, similar to the Contract with 
America of maybe 15 years ago, that people can put in their front 
pocket and they can pull it out and they can look at it. But I'm going 
to take a little time to go through some of the principles in this bill 
because I think this is important. I think this is a guideline for 
whatever we ultimately adopt. And let's go through some of these 
posters, Mr. Speaker.
  The number one principle of this health care bill of rights is to say 
this, and it does in the bill:

                              {time}  1600

  There will be no government-run health care plan.
  That is what the American people are saying. They do not want a 
Canadian-style system or a U.K. system, or any system where the Federal 
Government interferes and makes decisions and tells the doctor and the 
patient that you are going to have to do it this way, my way or the 
highway. We don't want that. The American people don't want that, and 
they said that loud and clear during the August recess.
  So number one in this Health Care Bill of Rights is no government-run 
health care system.
  The second item in the Bill of Rights is no cuts to Medicare. Mr. 
Speaker, I have already talked about that in the $500 billion, those 
Medicare cuts. It is something like a $10 billion cut to the hospice 
program. I think we all know what the hospice program is. In the last 
weeks, days, months of people's lives, we are going to cut that program 
to provide access to health care for 5 percent of the population, many 
of whom prefer not to have health insurance and we are going to end up 
forcing them to? No cuts to Medicare. Medicare needs to be shored up. 
It needs to be improved.
  Today, unless you are in a Medicare Advantage program, you cannot go 
and get an annual physical examination. You can when you first turn 65 
and get on Medicare, that is called an entry-level physical exam. But 
how about when you are 68 or 72? You absolutely on an annual basis need 
a physical examination as you age to make sure that nothing has 
happened. And yet a lot of seniors don't go and get a physical because 
it is not paid for, and they are on a fixed income. For goodness sake, 
this year there is no increase in COLA for Social Security. How are 
they going to pay for these things? Yet, instead of solving that 
problem and putting more into Medicare, we are going to take $500 
billion out of it. It makes no sense.
  So under this Health Care Bill of Rights, my bill, H.R. 3700, no cuts 
to Medicare. And no new deficit spending.
  You know, the President said, Mr. Speaker, and he said it very 
clearly, I will not sign any bill that adds one dime to the deficit. I 
think I am quoting him word for word. Well, Mr. President, you will 
like my bill because it says no new deficit spending. We can do this 
without any additional deficit spending. My colleagues, look at H.R. 
3400 and you will see, it can be done without adding to the debt and 
spending into red ink.
  Colleagues, number four is a good one and it is important to people 
across this country. Number four on the Health Care Bill of Rights, no 
new taxes. No new taxes. These bills, whether we are talking about H.R. 
3200, the House bill, or the bill that is coming through the Senate, 
there are new taxes all over the place. The Joint Commission on 
Taxation has attested to that. That is a bipartisan group. The 
Congressional Budget Office has attested to that. Again, a creation of 
the Congress, they work for us, and their director is chosen by the 
majority party, indeed, by the Speaker of the House.
  And you ask the question: Are there new taxes in here? Absolutely. 
There is going to be a tax on every insurance policy. The Senate bill 
is coming along that is being marked up this week and maybe next week 
as well, taxes some health insurance policies 40 percent. You put a 40 
percent excise tax, Mr. Speaker, on these insurance policies, who pays 
that? I guarantee you the

[[Page H10444]]

premiums go up, and John Q. Citizen, who is not making $250,000 a 
year--the President promised when he was campaigning when he became 
President, if he became President, and of course he did, that nobody 
making less than $250,000 a year would see any increase in their taxes, 
not one dime, just like he said there would be not one dime of deficit 
spending for this health care, oh, excuse me, health insurance reform. 
So no new taxes. H.R. 3400, no new taxes.
  The fifth thing on the group of ten, no rationing of health care. 
This may be one of the biggest concerns that our citizens have. As a 
former physician, OB/GYN doctor for 26 years, I can assure you that 
people worry about this. If we had this public plan, this public 
option, the government competing with the private marketplace, as H.R. 
3200 calls for--and the Speaker and all three of the chairmen of the 
committees of jurisdiction, Mr. Rangel, Mr. Waxman, Mr. Miller, they 
all want a strong government hand to really ultimately squeeze out the 
private marketplace. What happens is, and this is not just Phil Gingrey 
predicting this, Mr. Speaker, this is the Lewin Group, a well-respected 
group which says that within 3 to 4 years, probably 100 million people 
who today get their health insurance through their employer and they 
are happy with it, they will end up losing that because the employer 
will be in a position that it will be cheaper for them to just pay a 
fine and let them go into the government plan.
  Well, so much for the President's promise that if you like what you 
have, you can keep it. Until you can't. You know, this is something 
that I think we need to hold the President's feet to the fire and say, 
look, let's promise the American people that they truly can keep what 
they have if they like it.
  So you get the situation where everybody is on the government plan, 
well, that's when you get to the business of rationing when maybe the 
party in power has made a pledge of no new taxes, they are not going to 
raise taxes, and yet you have all these additional people, millions, 
maybe 100 million that have morphed off of their employer plan into the 
government plan, and we can't pay for all of them. So what are you 
going to do? You are going to have to raise taxes and cut reimbursement 
to the providers, to our rural hospitals who have a disproportionate 
share of the poor that they are trying to treat and people who can't 
pay, so you are going to lower reimbursement to them.
  And finally, you are going to say to the patient, you know what, we 
would love to be able to fix your hip, but you are 85 years old and we 
just can't afford it. You are just going to have to take a little Advil 
or aspirin. And by the way, we will pay for a walker and an alarm that 
you can wear on your belt if you happen to fall. But we will not fix 
your hip or replace your knee. That happens in other countries that 
have single payer, government-run systems. That will happen here unless 
my bill passes which says no rationing of health care.
  Number six on the Health Care Bill of Rights, no employer or 
individual mandate to provide or have health insurance.
  Now look, colleagues, Mr. Speaker, of course I want employers to 
continue to provide that health insurance benefit for their employees. 
I think that is something that people have come over the last 75 years 
in this country to expect. A decent job includes health care coverage 
for you and hopefully your family, and that your employer pays the 
bigger percentage of that, and the amount you have to pay is a smaller 
amount. And I want employers to continue to do that and provide that 
benefit and not whittle away at how much they pay versus how much the 
employee has to pay.
  I would encourage every person in this country, every adult who is 
working, whether they are 21 years old or 72 years old, to have health 
insurance. I think it is important especially to have catastrophic 
coverage, even if you think you are 10 feet tall and bulletproof and 
you are 26 years old and you don't smoke or drink alcohol and exercise 
on a regular basis, nobody in your family has ever suffered from cancer 
or heart disease, and your grandparents and great-grandparents lived to 
be 100 years old, and you think, I don't need this. I can't afford it, 
for one thing. I am paying for a car and rent on an apartment. I have 
$125,000 in student loans with interest that I am trying to pay off. I 
can't afford this.

  And then you convince them, yes, but what if you get hit by a truck? 
What if you are the person who comes down with insulin-dependent 
diabetes or high blood pressure or heart disease and you are not 
covered? So at least purchase a health care insurance policy that gives 
you catastrophic coverage in the event of a catastrophe.
  In the halls of the hospitals I worked in, we used to refer to those 
as ``horrendaplasties,'' when something horrible happens to a person, 
and it could, any motor vehicle accident. Have that catastrophic 
coverage. Get an insurance policy where you have a high deductible and 
maybe you have to pay $3,000 or $4,000 out of your own pocket before 
insurance kicks in, but we want to encourage people to at least do 
that.
  But this bill, the big fat one, H.R. 3200, actually allows the 
government to say, no, that is not good enough. You have a mandate. You 
have to have health insurance, but this high deductible, low premium 
that you can afford, that gives you that catastrophic coverage, that 
doesn't count. We are not going to count that as health insurance. And 
so we are going to mandate that you have coverage and we are going to 
mandate that you have high first dollar and very high premium that you 
can't afford, and you are probably not eligible for Medicaid or some 
safety net program or a government subsidy. And yet we are going to 
hold a gun to these people's head, Mr. Speaker, and say you have to 
have health insurance, and if you don't, the IRS is going to fine you 
$25,000 and you could be charged with a misdemeanor and spend a year in 
jail.
  My colleagues, is that America? I mean, you know, I try to always 
keep a copy of the Constitution in my pocket, and sure enough, here it 
is, the Constitution of the United States. If you go to the glossary, 
you are not going to find anything in here about mandatory health care. 
No. You talk about the Bill of Rights and freedom of speech and press 
and religion, but there is nothing in here about forcing people in this 
country against their will, even though it is good public policy for 
them to have health insurance, and we would encourage and try to 
provide, as we do in H.R. 3400, the 250-page bill, to help them be able 
to get an affordable policy, but to force them to buy something they 
can't afford, no.
  So number 6 in the Health Care Bill of Rights, no individual or 
employer mandate. Just encourage them and help them to be able to do 
that.
  Number 7, and this is what created all of the controversy, Mr. 
Speaker, when the President was right here at the dais giving yet again 
a fantastic speech, as he always does, and talked about, made the 
comment that in his health care reform plan, that no illegal immigrant 
would be eligible for any government subsidy, and then the comment was 
made, and you know the rest of the story.
  But truth in fact is, and that's the reason for number 7, no taxpayer 
funded coverage for illegal immigrants in my bill, H.R. 3700. No 
taxpayer funded coverage for illegal immigrants.

                              {time}  1615

  I think the President realized though, after he made that speech here 
a couple of weeks ago, and maybe his crackerjack staff told him, said, 
Mr. President, you know, there is this problem in the bill where it 
doesn't make people verify who they are. You know, they don't have to 
show a photo ID or a secure Social Security number to attest that truly 
they are here in this country legally. And if you don't require that, 
as we do, by the way, Mr. Speaker, in other safety-net programs like 
Medicaid and like the SCHIP program, the Children's Health Insurance 
Program, if we don't require that in this new reform bill, you are 
going to have--let me tell you, that's just--you might as well point a 
strong electromagnet to the southern border and say, you know, Come on, 
hey, have we get a deal for you. We've got a great education system. 
We've got a great health care system, the best in the world and, you 
know, you too can enjoy that.
  No, the American people don't want it. I don't want it, nobody in 
this

[[Page H10445]]

Chamber should want it. So no taxpayer-funded coverage for illegal 
immigrants. Number 7. Now, the last three items in this Health Care 
Bill of Rights, we've spent a little time here, Mr. Speaker, talking 
about what my bill would prohibit in any health care or health 
insurance reform. Now, I want to talk about the next three items, 8, 9 
and 10, which would assure what we have in any health care reform bill 
or health insurance reform.
  And Number 8, and the President has been very firm on this, and I 
agree with him completely. The Democratic majority has been very firm 
on this, and I agree with them completely. Preexisting condition 
coverage. Insurance companies would not be allowed to deny coverage to 
people because of preexisting conditions. And that denial can take two 
shapes, Mr. Speaker. It can be an outright denial of saying, No, I'm 
sorry, you know, you've got high blood pressure or you've got diabetes 
or you've had a coronary bypass and we're not going to offer you 
insurance. You're just not insurable. You're too big a risk for us.
  Or they could do it another way and say, oh, yeah, heck yeah, we'll 
cover you. We're a great, good company and want to get some good PR out 
of this. But oh, by the way, your premium's going to be four times 
standard rates.
  Well, that's pretty much a denial too. People can't afford that, so 
Number 8 is very important. Preexisting condition coverage. You know, 
you think about somebody that--I talked about young people and wanting 
to encourage them to have health insurance. Let's say you are 19 years 
old, straight out of high school and have your first job, or 25 years 
old, right out of college or graduate school, have your first job, and 
you're one of those people I described that's in good health and you 
think, gee, you know, I'd rather just kind of go bare and pay my own 
way. And I'll put money aside each month in an escrow account. I'll 
have a special savings account, and I'll save this money, and when I 
need it--hopefully I won't. Maybe I'll have an annual physical and 
spend $175. But I'm not going to get sick because I'm taking care of 
myself. I'm not like a lot of people who show no personal 
responsibility in regard to their own health.
  And so you know, they really don't want to spend $400, $500, $600 a 
month paying a premium when they're not using it. But they do it 
anyway. They do it anyway. And they work for a company for 20 years, 
and for the first 15 they're paying that same premium that everybody 
else pays. They have to because of the Federal law, called HIPPA, and 
they're paying those premiums but yet the insurance company is not 
having to pay out any claims for them.
  But during that time, you know, all of a sudden they get a little 
skin cancer that has to be removed. Or maybe they have a little chest 
pain and it turns out they've got some coronary blockage or their blood 
pressure goes up. And you know, here they've been paying, and then all 
of a sudden we get an economy like we have today and they lose their 
job, and then they try to get insurance after COBRA runs out, if 
they're even eligible--they have to work for a company that has more 
than 20 employees to be eligible for COBRA. And let's say that runs 
out. And then they're out of luck. Mr. Speaker, they can't get 
coverage.
  Well, that's not fair. That's absolutely unfair. And I would say, 
under Number 8, to the insurance companies, you need to cover that 
person for the rest of their life, or at least until they go on 
Medicare, and you need to cover them at standard rates because you have 
made a really good profit off of them and now, when they need you, you 
should not be allowed to abandon them. These are the kind of things 
that we can agree on. And I think we do. And quite honestly, Mr. 
Speaker, I think the insurance industry, the health insurance industry, 
they're ready to do that. They have already made commitments and 
they're ready to do that. And these are some of the things that we can 
do. And that's Number 8 in my Health Care Bill of Rights.
  The ninth thing, we've already talked about a little bit, medical 
liability reform. You know, there are a lot of different ideas out 
there, not just mine, although I've introduced a bill every year since 
I've been here for the last 7 years, calling on certain specific 
things. I won't get into the details today, Mr. Speaker, but it's 
called the Health Act. And it's a fair bill that guarantees that 
patients that get injured by a health care provider or hospital where 
they're practicing below the standard of care for that community, 
they've just messed up, that patients do not lose their right to a 
redress of their grievances to be compensated for their lost wages and 
for any health care that they need for the rest of their lives, quite 
honestly. In some cases you're talking about a compensation or a 
judgment in the millions of dollars.
  So we don't deny that in wanting liability reform. What we try to do 
is cut down on frivolous lawsuits so that doctors are not spending so 
much time worrying about this and running up the cost of health care 
for everybody else by ordering needless, cover-your-back tests that, in 
some cases, could be downright detrimental to the health of the 
patient. And of course, so many doctors in high-risk specialties, at a 
fairly young age, before they turn 50, they give it up. They stop 
delivering babies. They won't go to the emergency room. So surely the 
President means what he says when at least he promises pilot projects 
on medical liability reform.
  Please, Mr. President, please, it could save $120 billion a year. You 
would not have to tax people, the small business men and women $800 
billion and cause us to lose more jobs, and you would not have to gut 
Medicare if you'll do these things. And Number 10. And this is the last 
in the list of the 10 prescriptions for a healthy America, called the 
Health Care Bill of Rights, H.R. 3700, the promise to reduce health 
care cost. Why should we do anything if it doesn't bring down the cost? 
And so far, Mr. Speaker, the Congressional Budget Office is just saying 
repeatedly, it doesn't.
  What this bill, H.R. 3200, no matter how you slice it and dice it and 
combine it with the one out of the Ways and Means Committee and the one 
that came through the Education and Labor Committee and you shake it 
all around and let it come through the Rules Committee; it doesn't 
bring down the cost. In fact, it bends the curve in the wrong 
direction. So my bill would assure that we reduce health care cost. 
H.R. 3400 does that. Senator Dr. Tom Coburn's bill that he cosponsored 
with Representative Paul Ryan from Wisconsin, our ranking member on the 
Budget Committee here in the House--that bill brings down the cost of 
health care.

  So that's my pledge. That's the bill that I wanted to talk about 
today to my colleagues, Mr. Speaker, and I hope that they will look at 
it. You know, I've got a--I carry this around in my pocket. And 
colleagues, you can go to gingrey.house.gov and look for the Health 
Care Bill of Rights or 10 Prescriptions for a Healthy America. That's 
what we've talked about here over this last hour, almost an hour. And I 
commend it to my colleagues, and I welcome their ideas. My door's open, 
just as the President said his door's open and he welcomes our ideas. 
It's a sharing. It's a bipartisan thing. Yes, let's stop bickering and 
let's get the job done. I thank you for the time, Mr. Speaker, and I 
will now yield back.

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