[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 47 (Wednesday, March 24, 2010)]
[House]
[Page H2264]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE REALITY OF HEALTH CARE REFORM
(Mr. FLAKE asked and was given permission to address the House for 1
minute.)
Mr. FLAKE. Madam Speaker, when the President signed the health care
reform bill into law, he noted, ``The overheated rhetoric of reform
will finally confront the reality of reform.'' He's right.
Here is the reality: Insurance companies will now be required to
accept children with preexisting conditions and carry adults up to the
age of 26 on their parents' policies. New policies will have to cover
preventative care without copays. Such requirements may or may not be
in the public interest, but health insurance that is no longer a hedge
against risk cannot accurately be called health insurance. Health
insurance companies are now more like public utilities.
Keep in mind that individual mandates requiring the purchase of
insurance to broaden the pool will not kick in for 4 years. New
competition is not required, nor is there any serious effort to deal
with legal liability. In other words, there is no downward pressure on
cost, only upward pressure.
Madam Speaker, in this body we can pass all the laws that we want,
but we cannot suspend the laws of economics, nor can we phase them in.
Americans should now be prepared for higher premiums.
That, Madam Speaker, is the reality of reform.
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