[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 51 (Friday, April 8, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H2539-H2540]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE REPUBLICAN ROAD TO RUIN BUDGET
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New
York (Mr. Tonko) for 5 minutes.
Mr. TONKO. Mr. Speaker, the Republican road-to-ruin budget, if
enacted, will end Medicare. It will end the program that 46 million
seniors and disabled individuals depend upon for their health care.
This gross injustice is made immeasurably more egregious and offensive
by the fact that this is being done not to balance the budget, but to
expand and permanently guarantee even bigger tax cuts for millionaires
and billionaires and to give new tax breaks to some of the world's most
profitable companies.
Rather than the path to prosperity, this budget is more like the
road-to-riches, a road paved in gold with lavish handouts for special
interests, paid for and built with dollars from senior citizens who
will see their hard-earned
[[Page H2540]]
benefits rationed more and more with every passing year.
I have heard a lot of talk in the last few months about the need to
make tough choices in this budget. Well, the average senior on Medicare
earns just over $19,000 a year. About one-quarter of Medicare
beneficiaries suffer from a cognitive or mental impairment, and many
have at least one or more chronic medical conditions. I ask my
Republican colleagues, what exactly is it about stripping these
Americans bare of their health and economic security that qualifies as
tough? There is nothing tough about stealing from the poor, the weak
and the frail to give to the rich.
Our seniors, on the other hand, know all about tough choices. Do I
buy groceries or do I buy prescriptions? Do I pay rent or do I pay
medical bills? It hurts, but how much will it cost? These are tough
choices. These are life-and-death choices.
With the passage of Medicare in 1965, we entered into a covenant with
every American citizen. This budget breaks that promise and brings us
back to square one. The Republican voucher plan ends Medicare. Instead,
seniors will be on their own, with a measly voucher and forced to buy
insurance in the private market, where all decisions will be profit-
driven. More profits for insurance companies on the backs of seniors--
sounds like a Republican plan to me.
This new voucher program amounts to a ration card, and the value of
the voucher is not linked to increases in health care costs in the
private market. Yet the costs of private health insurance have risen
over 5,000 percent since the creation of Medicare--5,000 percent.
The analysis of the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has
estimated that in less than 20 years, the vouchers under the Republican
road-to-ruin budget would pay just 32 cents on every dollar that a
senior spends on health care.
Now, the Republicans have repeatedly stated that their budget gives
seniors the same coverage as Members of Congress. Well, as a Member of
Congress myself, I know that our health plans pay for about 72 cents on
every dollar of our health coverage, not 32 cents on the dollar.
According to CBO, the voucher program will provide a ration of $8,000
to seniors every year to purchase their health care from private
insurance companies. Yet the private insurance premium charged by Blue
Cross in 2010 for a Member of Congress was well over $9,000. Does
anyone honestly believe that sick senior citizens and people with
permanent disabilities will be able to find coverage from private
insurance for $8,000 when they are now charging over $9,000 to Members
of Congress?
According to The Wall Street Journal, the average cost of health care
for seniors over 65 in 2009 was $11,743. If an insurance company were
to take on $11,743 of risk for $8,000, they would be out of business in
short order. But Republicans don't believe their insurance company
buddies will actually offer coverage for $8,000 or even for $11,743
just to break even. They know that seniors will have to go into their
pockets for thousands of dollars as this plan hands Medicare over to
the private insurance companies to make even more profits. In fact, CBO
found that seniors will have to pay more than twice as much out of
pocket as they do today.
This budget takes trillions from seniors and rations their care, and
where does it shift the savings? Well, if you guessed permanent tax
cuts for millionaires and a new tax break for corporations making
billions, you guessed right. After more than a year of hurling lies and
demagoguery about death panels and rationing care, Republicans on the
panel before us have demanded that we restrict seniors to a health care
ration card and ensure that those who cannot afford coverage on their
own will be left to suffer or die. Well, therein is the real death
penalty they once talked about. They pay lip service to Americans'
responsibility to share the burden and instead steal from those who
cannot afford an expensive lobbyist and give to millionaires and
billionaires and companies that can afford much, much more.
I'm not speaking of playing politics. America knows that our budget
is a statement of priorities and values, not purely dollars and cents.
America's families set priorities with their own budget each and every
day. And I respectfully and honestly disagree with the values and
priorities that the Republicans have established in their road-to-ruin
budget. Let's not end Medicare.
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