[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 50 (Thursday, April 7, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H2508-H2510]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE BUDGET CRISIS
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Hultgren). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 5, 2011, the gentleman from California (Mr.
Garamendi) is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority
leader.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Mr. Speaker, thank you.
I want to turn our attention to the issues that are before us today
and see if we can have a better understanding of what has taken place.
We just heard a little bit about honoring our troops. Let's be very
clear about this. The Democratic Caucus in this House, the President,
and the Senate will always and have always honored our troops. We are
in the midst of a very serious budget crisis for this year with very,
very serious issues at stake, and the Republicans chose to attach to
the funding bill numerous cuts that devastate important programs that
affect the well-being of every man, woman, and child in this Nation
and, indeed, around the world. Because of those cuts, as well as
certain language that was added to the bill, we chose not to vote for
the funding.
The President has said, Stop the games. Stop playing around. Give us
a straight up and down on funding the government without all of these
add-ons and games that are being played by our Republican colleagues.
The President has asked for a clean bill. We should give him a clean
bill and carry on to fund the government and provide for our troops and
our military families, and we will do that.
Now let's understand what is at stake. Not only in the current year's
budget, which is the next 7 months, but in the year beginning on
October 12, the Republicans have put together a proposal that would
devastate seniors and those who are unable to care for and to provide
themselves with medical services--in other words, those dependent upon
the Medicaid program.
{time} 1520
Very straightforward. The proposal that was put out by the Republican
caucus 2 days ago would terminate and stop Medicare as we know it
today. Medicare is a program in which every working American pays into
it, and when they became 65, they expect to receive the Medicare health
care benefits that are guaranteed or at least have been guaranteed for
the last 40-some years. That's a uniform benefit package across this
Nation. It is a very successful program. It's one that Americans
literally live long enough to get into. And yet the Republican caucus
is proposing to terminate it, to end the Medicare program. And instead,
turn over the $400 billion a year that goes into the Medicare services,
turn it over to the private health insurance companies--the biggest
gift ever given to the private health insurance companies.
I know those companies. I was the insurance commissioner in
California for 8 years. And I spent most every day of those 8 years
chasing after the health insurance companies, forcing them to pay
claims and stopping them from discriminating against people who had
preexisting conditions and developing programs and policies that were
underfunded, underpaid, and underperformed.
That cannot happen to our seniors, but that's what the Republicans
want to do. And we need to stop it. And we will because the seniors of
this Nation already sense what is at hand. They already know that the
Republican budget proposed would devastate one of the two pillars of
the social safety net that every senior in this Nation at one time or
another depends upon.
The second pillar--we've already seen the path that this is going to
go on--in 2004, the Republican caucus, together with the Republican
President, George W. Bush, proposed to privatize Social Security.
Fortunately, the revolt that started in the Democratic caucus of
[[Page H2509]]
this House and carried across the Nation stopped that from happening.
We know what's coming down the train track here, and that is another
effort to privatize Social Security, to take those hundreds of billions
of dollars and turn them over to Wall Street so Wall Street can play
additional financial games.
It will not happen, Americans will not give up Social Security and
Medicare to satisfy the whims of the Republican caucus that seems
determined upon destroying effective government in this Nation.
I'd like to call upon my colleague from the great State of Oregon
(Mr. DeFazio). If you will join me in this conversation and we will see
where it takes us.
Mr. DeFAZIO. I thank the gentleman. Certainly his extraordinary and
extensive experience as an insurance commissioner ably qualifies him to
comment on what's going to happen when the Republicans kill Medicare
and instead force future seniors into private insurance plans
presumably sold through some sort of exchange.
Now, of course the Republicans just spent the last year reviling
ObamaCare, which creates exchanges for people who are uninsured. They
said people who are uninsured should not be forced to go to exchanges
and buy good standard policies. Well, now what they want to do is force
future seniors to give up Medicare and force them to go to exchanges
and buy private policies with some premium support.
Now, there are a few problems with this issue. Among the things they
repeal are the reforms of the insurance industry. And one of the most
critical reforms, as far as seniors or older workers or older Americans
go, or Americans who've ever been ill or ever had an ill kid, is
removing the condition that an insurance company can have a preexisting
condition exclusion. That is, you were sick once, they won't sell you a
policy. Maybe they'll sell you a policy, but they will exclude that
condition and other conditions they think you might have, and they're
going to charge you 4, 5, 6, 10 times as much for your policy because
you're a risky person. They only want the gravy.
It also repeals another little trick of the industry. This has
already stopped now. This is one of the most horrific things the
insurance industry has done to people in America. Pay your premium
every week. Your employer pays your premium every week.
You get sick. This happened to a woman in Texas, actually Joe
Barton's district. She had breast cancer. Needed serious treatment. The
insurance industry, the insurance company she had, put a team on her
case. Isn't that great. They want to help her out. No. They want to
find out a way to throw her off the plan. And they found that once she
had gone to a dermatologist and didn't tell them about it. And that
might have been related to her breast cancer, so they threw her out of
the plan.
Now, the dermatologist wrote a letter to the insurance company and
said, well, no, actually, no, this woman just kind of had a skin
condition that has nothing to do with cancer, and you can't do this.
And they did. And finally, to give them credit, Joe Barton intervened,
called the president of the company and said, you're getting one big
black eye here. Give this woman back her health insurance. And she got
it back. But quite a bit later, her cancer had advanced, and it hurt
her chances for a full recovery. That's called recision.
Under the Republican proposal, recisions are back. You get sick? Your
company gets to comb through your life and find out a way not to pay
your policy. And oh, by the way, if you're sick now and your policy
lapses at the end of the year, they won't have to renew it because
they're doing away with that reform, too.
So we will take away those horrible reforms that the Democrats put on
the anticompetitive insurance industry--and oh, by the way, the
insurance industry is exempt from the antitrust law. So the insurance
industry can and does and has discriminated in these ways. It can and
does fix prices. Can and does share or divide markets to drive up their
profits. All of those things are back under the Ryan proposal. Isn't
that great?
Now, how is this going to serve seniors? So now, here they are.
They're going to get a little premium support--that is, the Federal
Government will not let them have the money; they don't even get a
voucher so they could just say well, I'm going to go do something on my
own. They have to buy one of the health care plans that the Republicans
would dictate they can buy--presumably through an exchange--and they'll
get a little premium support. The government will give the money
directly to the insurance company.
Now, the insurance company can charge them whatever premium they
want. So this is problematic.
Now, around here, the Republicans are a little schizophrenic. Some
days they love the Congressional Budget Office--when it gives them
results they like. And other days they hate the Congressional Budget
Office--when it gives them answers they don't like.
So in this case the Congressional Budget Office looked at it and said
well, actually, under the Ryan plan, seniors who today pay 25 percent
of their health care costs in the aggregate under the Ryan plan of the
future, they will pay 68 percent of their health care costs. Guess what
that means? That means we are back to 1964.
Now, there's not many people around here old enough to remember '64.
I certainly wasn't serving here but I know what happened then. Congress
passed, Lyndon Baines Johnson signed, Medicare. Now one of the
principal drivers of that was we had a poverty rate for seniors--that
is, our parents and grandparents--they were at twice the poverty rate
that they are today because of medical costs.
Nobody can save enough money to provide for their medical care. And
if you can't buy insurance--which most seniors can't and couldn't--and
you get sick, you're bankrupt. You lose everything. And the principal
thing that drove seniors into poverty and bankruptcy in those days was
medical costs. So Medicare was established.
And now the greatest legacy proposed here by Mr. Ryan, the chair of
the Budget Committee, is to end Medicare. And he's doing this under the
guise of the path to prosperity. The question is whose prosperity? Not
the seniors. Perhaps it's the insurance industry.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Thank you very much, Mr. DeFazio.
I heard you toss out two numbers. One number was the amount of
medical, the percentage of the costs of medical care that seniors now
pay. Did you say 28 percent?
Mr. DeFAZIO. It's about 25 percent on average of all of their medical
costs, the ones for seniors who are eligible for Medicare.
Mr. GARAMENDI. If the Republican proposal goes forward, seniors will
wind up paying how much?
Mr. DeFAZIO. Sixty-eight percent of their health care costs.
{time} 1530
Mr. GARAMENDI. I see. So we are shifting the costs to the seniors;
right?
Mr. DeFAZIO. Right.
If the gentleman would yield.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Of course.
Mr. DeFAZIO. We are not going to do anything about the costs of
medical care or the premiums charged or the egregious practices of the
insurance industry. We are just going to shift the costs onto future
seniors. Many of these people, if they are 55 today, they have been
paying into Social Security and Medicare for 35, 37 years, and now,
suddenly, oh, sorry, can't have it.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Game's over. You can put that RIP back up.
Mr. DeFAZIO. If I could, just one other point.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Please.
Mr. DeFAZIO. The one other thing, since the Republicans seem to want
to roll back the clock, are they are going to bring back the doughnut
hole. Now, the doughnut hole is this bizarre construct of the
Republican prescription drug benefit. Remember, instead of designing a
low-cost prescription drug benefit that was uniform and available to
all seniors on Medicare--we could have done that at a very, very low
cost--the Republicans said let's subsidize the pharmaceutical and
insurance industries and create a confusing mix of plans, and that's
what we'll do for seniors. $750 billion over 10 years to subsidize the
pharmaceutical and insurance industries and give seniors the doughnut
hole.
[[Page H2510]]
Now, last year we began to close the doughnut hole, and this year the
pharmaceutical industry has to give discounted prices to seniors in the
doughnut hole. Mr. Ryan would undo that. No more discounted prices for
seniors in the doughnut hole. That's eating into the obscene profits of
the pharmaceutical companies. So they've got a little provision in this
bill. The doughnut hole is back. Make the world safe for doughnut
holes. That's the Ryan path to prosperity.
Mr. GARAMENDI. I don't think so. It seems to me to be the path to
poverty for seniors. And it goes way, way beyond that.
Our colleague from Texas, Sheila Jackson Lee, has joined us. Ms. Lee,
if you would care to comment. I know this is an issue you are deeply
concerned about.
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Well, since, like Peter, I spent 6 or 7
hours on the floor of the House some years ago, Peter, I guess the
1990s, when we were fighting against the inevitable doughnut hole, we
held the vote open--I shouldn't say ``we.'' The Republicans held the
vote open for at least 6 or 7 hours. I think we voted at 5 a.m. when
the last arm was twisted. I think someone had a broken arm in order to
ensure the doughnut hole was in.
We, of course, have come back, Democrats, and created the Affordable
Care Act. And I tell you, every senior center I have gone through since
the famous passage of the Affordable Care Act, seniors have said,
``Thank you. Thank you.'' If anyone has an 84-year-old mother--I just
lost my mother, but our conversations centered around the enormous cost
of prescription drugs and how relieved she was to, at that time, to
have had some relief from the doughnut hole.
Now, as we watched our friends just a few, maybe about an hour or so
ago, I hope there was some camera view of the glee that was shown when
there was a suggestion that we would shut the government down and, in
essence, implode, if I can use that on the floor of the House, any
budgeting conversation that makes sense, such as the fact that what we
are doing now with the CR is dated and old, it is passe, it is cutting
into funding for a present year. What it's doing tomorrow, which is
what the groundwork is being laid, is literally destroying the systems
as we know it. Sixty-six percent of the seniors don't like this plan.
But I want to throw something out. Let me let them understand what
the plan is. The plan is block grants, block grants given to disparate
State governments, of which we have no control over, to be able to
manipulate and play with Medicare. What sense does that make? Block
grants that will in fact be able to be used for whatever we want to
use.
The State of Texas, for example, received $3.2 billion in education
funds through the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act. Where is it
my good friend? It is in the rainy day fund, never used for schools.
Can you imagine block grants for Medicare? Can you imagine the nursing
homes that will be closed through Medicaid, and then, of course,
seniors getting Medicare? And then they shout for joy not only for
shutting down the government over the next 2 days, but they shout for
joy for the kind of budget that they believe they will be able to--they
whet their appetite that they will be able to do for 2012. They will
implode this country as we know it.
We want budget cuts. We don't want to see the government shut down.
But there is a morality and a character and an integrity, and there is
called a heart. And I like what you are saying there. The Republican
budget would destroy Medicare. And I just want to say this. We have
been around this block before. I heard one Republican leadership say
some years ago, ``Over my cold dead body.'' The opposition to my
President, who was a great hero of Texas, Lyndon Baines Johnson, even
when he tried Medicare, there were those who said how it would destroy
America, how it was going to undermine America. And look where we are
today. How many lives have we saved because seniors had Medicare?
I see that there is this effort to bury this program that has kept
the grandmothers and granddads of America's children alive for them to
be able to see their grandchildren grow up because they have had good
health care. Where is the morality?
Mr. GARAMENDI. Well, we seriously question the morality of the
proposal that's being put forward by the Republican caucus.
You said something that I want to focus in on. The details are
important. We talked about Medicare and the end of Medicare as we know
it. And basically, as Mr. DeFazio was saying, it's a program in which
Medicare becomes privatized. The money is turned over to the insurance
companies; our future, our seniors' future turned over to the insurance
companies and their whims.
But you also raised a very, very important point. And that is all
across this Nation there are millions of Americans who are in nursing
homes who now depend upon the Medicaid program, Medicaid program for
the payment to the nursing homes. In the budget program, there is the
block granting of the Medicaid program, and therefore the likelihood
that the payments to the nursing homes will be reduced or end and those
people will not be able to get care in the nursing home.
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