[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 15 (Wednesday, February 2, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S432-S433]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTH CARE
Mr. REID. Madam President, if the American people want to understand
the difference between Democrats and Republicans, it is my suggestion
that they pay attention to what is happening on the Senate floor this
week. The two parties simply have different priorities. Democrats are
fighting to modernize our Nation's air travel. Republicans are fighting
to repeal the health care reform law, ignoring the 80 percent of
Americans who want them to leave it alone. In other words, Democrats
want to get passengers the rights they deserve. Republicans want to
take away patients' rights that they already have, rights that are
saving lives, saving money, and saving Medicare, just as we promised
when we wrote this law.
What Republicans refuse to understand, or at least what they hope the
people do not realize, is that in America we give our citizens rights;
we don't take them away. That principle comes first and inspired the
country's founding and has directed our evolution and defines our
promise.
We as Senators have a choice. We can move forward or we can look
backward; we can make progress or we can stage a futile fight with the
future. It is clear this week that while the American people and Senate
Democrats are looking ahead, Senate Republicans are looking for a way
to distract the American people. This is what moving forward looks
like: Our bill to modernize our Nation's air travel will protect
consumers. It is a passengers' bill of rights. We know delays happen
when we fly from the airports around the country. We try to fly
sometimes. When we do, we want to make sure passengers are treated
right. We want to make sure passengers have the right to timely and
accurate information about their flight. We want to make sure
passengers have the right to food, water, and access to restrooms when
they are forced to wait.
We want to make sure passengers have the right to know that while
they are sitting on an airplane that is on a tarmac--as I said here
yesterday, 3\1/2\ hours in Dallas alone waiting for a gate--we want to
make sure passengers know the airline they are flying has a contingency
plan to get them where they need to go.
This bill will also make flying safer and make it more efficient. It
will help prevent accidents on the runways. It will finally introduce
GPS technology to our Nation's air traffic control system. Mongolia has
GPS. We don't. In most every country in the world, they determine where
airplanes are with GPS. They do it in the air. We are still doing it on
the ground. This bill will improve access to rural communities, which
is important to Nevadans in rural cities such as Ely, NV, which is not
near a big metropolitan area, and would reduce delays in the first
place. That is what moving forward looks like, and that is why Senator
Rockefeller has worked for years to get this bill passed.
But there have been little side issues that have come up. The side
issues are going to be debated on the floor and we will either pass
them or get rid of them and get this bill on the road to the
President's desk. So what I have talked about is what moving forward
looks like. That is what we Democrats want to do.
This is what moving backward would look like: Republicans' symbolic
effort to repeal the rights in the health care reform bill would put us
all at risk. I am going to only mention a few of the things, but it
would let insurance companies, once again, stand in the way of a child
and the medical care that child needs. It would take away that child's
right to get health insurance and instead give insurance companies the
right to use asthma or diabetes as the excuse to take away that care.
It would kick kids off their parents' health insurance. It would take
away seniors' rights to a free wellness check. It would force seniors
to pay more for their prescriptions. It would raise taxes on small
businesses and add $1.5 trillion to our deficit.
That is what their amendment would do.
This is how health insurance worked before reforms became the law of
the land. We do not want to go back. Madam President, I am sure you
have had parents come to you with tears in their eyes, saying: Now my
child can get insurance. We don't want to have mothers say: What am I
going to do? That is what they said in the past.
There is one more difference between Democrats and Republicans. We
are fighting for jobs this week. Along with all the advantages in the
aviation modernization bill I mentioned a minute ago, it is also a jobs
bill. It will create and protect at least 280,000 American jobs. That
is why we are fighting so hard for this bill. This is a bipartisan
bill. Let's get to passing it.
While the health care reform law is making sick Americans healthier
and better, it is also helping unemployed Americans find work. A
healthier health care system is going to create hundreds of thousands
of jobs a year for the next decade.
I went to GW University Hospital--I wasn't sick--to visit somebody
there. A woman--she must have been one of the administrators--said: Oh,
I am so happy. She said: You know that health care bill you passed, we
are going to hire 500 new physicians. I came back and told my staff
that and they said you must have it mixed up. Five hundred? I said:
Let's find out her name and you call her. They called her. I was right.
That is what she told me, and she said that is because of the health
care bill we passed.
We are talking about this health care bill also helping unemployed
Americans find work. A healthier health care system is going to create
hundreds of thousands of jobs a year for the next decade. That is what
they tell us. That is because when businesses do not have to spend much
on premiums, they can spend more on people--and healthier workers are,
of course, more productive workers and that helps our economy at every
level.
This is the difference between moving forward and moving backward. It
is the difference between giving people rights and taking them away. In
the late days of the health care reform debate, my colleagues on the
other side asked us to stop everything and start over. It is nothing
more than an excuse to keep insurance companies in charge of health
care in this country. The minority is again asking us to turn back the
clock on the progress we made, turn health care back to the insurance
companies. They can dig in their heels, try to slam on the brakes as
hard as they want, but the course of our country goes in only one
direction. We move forward.
Madam President, as I announced earlier, Senator Paul is going to
give his maiden speech. I am sure his father is looking on through the
magic of all of the new communications we have to listen to his son
give a speech in the Senate. We are all anxious to hear him.
[[Page S433]]
Senator Paul.
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