[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 14 (Tuesday, February 1, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S371-S372]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTH CARE
Mr. REID. Mr. President, a lot of people are talking this morning
about a judge in Florida regarding his opinion on the health reform
law. I wish to talk about the law very briefly and then talk about the
effort to take away the rights that are in the law that are now
prevalent in the land.
The health reform bill has already saved lives and saved lots of
money. It is saving lives because children are not getting their
insurance taken away, as happened before we passed this law. They can
stay on their parents' health insurance plans until they are 26, and
even younger kids can't get kicked off their plans because they have a
pre-existing condition such as asthma or diabetes. Older Americans are
healthier because we are starting to close the coverage gap on
Medicare, which means they can have a wellness check for nothing--it
doesn't cost anything--which means, as far as the Medicare doughnut
hole, seniors can finally afford the prescription drugs they had to
skip or split before we passed this law.
Saving money. Last week, we saw how much this law is helping cut down
fraud in the health insurance industry.
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We have recovered more than $4 billion so far, and the law will keep
cracking down on those who are taking advantage of the vulnerable. As
small businesses in Nevada and across the country have discovered, we
are cutting taxes for businesses that give their employees health care.
These consequences of the health reform law--I have mentioned only a
few of them: save lives, save money, and save Medicare as we promised--
are just the tip of the iceberg. As more parts of the law go into
effect, it will do even more good; even more lives and more money will
be saved. It is important to remember this context when we talk about
the opinion handed down yesterday in Florida.
Two Federal judges have ruled in favor of the law, two have ruled
against it. Lawsuits and lawmakers' efforts to repeal this bill are
nothing more than attempts to raise taxes on small businesses, add more
than $1.5 trillion to the deficit, force seniors to pay more for their
prescriptions, and let insurance companies once again stand in the way
of a child and the medical care he or she needs.
Health care reform is complex, but this debate is very simple. We put
patients in control of their health care. Repeal would be insurance
companies back in charge. We cannot afford it, not with our wallets and
certainly not with our lives and health.
Let me spend just a minute on jobs. The health reform bill is about
jobs. I was visiting with someone from George Washington University,
the medical department. As I walked in, she said: You know, because of
the health care bill, we are going to hire 500 new physicians. I went
back and told my staff, and they said: Oh, no, that couldn't be true. I
had my staff go back and check with the woman who told me that, and it
is true. That is just one facility.
Also about jobs, we need to look to the future. Democrats are working
to create jobs and strengthen the middle class, and we are starting
today with the first jobs bill of this Congress. This bill, which will
modernize Americans' air travel, creates and protects more than 280,000
jobs. We are improving the infrastructure and reducing costly passenger
delays. We are going to have a passengers' bill of rights. This is the
kind of commonsense solution that creates jobs while making our economy
more efficient and America more competitive. This is a bipartisan bill.
We need to stop refighting yesterday's fights and start strengthening
our future. We are ready to work, to get the American people back to
work, and I am hopeful and confident our Republican colleagues will
join us in starting with this jobs bill on the floor today.
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