[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 51 (Friday, April 8, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H2537-H2538]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MEDICARE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Rhode Island (Mr. Cicilline) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CICILLINE. Mr. Speaker, I rise today in defense of our Nation's
seniors, who are currently under attack. And the worst part about it is
many of them are just waking up this morning to the nightmare that
faces them. And why is that? Because the Republican budget proposal
released this week is literally balanced on the fragile backs of our
Nation's seniors. That's right. It ends Medicare as we know it. That's
the simple truth. It no longer honors our commitment and our promise to
our Nation's seniors.
As Americans now know, we are in the midst of a serious budget
battle, and the Republicans are even threatening to shut down
government. And there are real differences between our approach to the
budget and the Republican budget released earlier this week. The
Republican budget replaces Medicare with a voucher system. Seniors will
have to use this voucher to buy insurance from private insurance
companies.
Under the Republican plan, Medicare as we know it will end. And in
the same budget proposal, the Republicans give away tens of billions of
dollars in subsidies to big oil companies. And under their plan, they
will slash support for seniors in nursing homes, while giving away tax
breaks to companies that ship our jobs overseas.
And what else? America's seniors, more than 150,000 in my home State
of Rhode Island, will literally be paying more for their health care
and getting less in order to provide additional tax breaks to the
wealthiest Americans, also reflected in this Republican budget.
To make matters worse, the Republican plan does not reduce the
deficit. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office determined that
this budget actually adds $8 trillion to the national debt over the
next decade because its cuts in spending are far outpaced by the
gigantic tax cuts for the richest Americans.
Our seniors cannot afford this Republican budget. It would deny them
health care, long-term care, and the benefits they've earned and
deserve.
[[Page H2538]]
The Republicans' choice to privatize Medicare, turning more power over
to the insurance companies, will result in reduced coverage and
exposure to greater financial risks for our seniors.
The Congressional Budget Office determined that under the Republican
budget seniors' out-of-pocket expenses for health care would more than
double, and could almost triple. To put that into context, the
Congressional Budget Office found out that by 2030 seniors would pay 68
percent of premiums and out-of-pocket costs under the Republican plan,
compared to only 25 percent under current law. And it found that the
Republican plan means seniors will pay more for their prescription
drugs because it reestablishes the doughnut hole.
Even Alice Rivlin, the former Office of Management and Budget
Director under President Clinton, who worked with the Republican
architect of this budget on a deficit reduction proposal, said she
could not support his Medicare proposal because it eliminated the
traditional Medicare choice and lowered the rate of growth beyond
what's defensible.
And the conservative Wall Street Journal concluded earlier this week,
quote: The plan would essentially end Medicare, which now pays for 48
million elderly and disabled Americans, as a program that directly pays
those bills.
Under the guise of deficit reduction, Republicans are recklessly
attacking the vital supports for our seniors.
We all agree that we have to address the deficit. The issue is not
whether we reduce the deficit but how we do it. We can't cut what helps
us create jobs, innovate for the future, and remain competitive in the
global marketplace. And we cannot balance this budget on the backs of
our Nation's seniors.
The Federal budget is about more than dollars and cents. It's a
statement of our values and priorities as a nation. Republicans in this
budget have set the wrong priorities. They would rather cut benefits to
seniors than cut subsidies to Big Oil or corporations that ship our
jobs overseas. The Republican budget breaks the promise we made to our
seniors to protect them in their golden years.
I say to my colleagues on the other side of the aisle: If we can't
protect our Greatest Generation, I ask you, what's next?
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