[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 53 (Tuesday, April 12, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H2577-H2578]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REPUBLICAN PATH TO THE PAST
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Virginia (Mr. Connolly) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CONNOLLY of Virginia. Mr. Speaker, the Republican budget for
fiscal year 2012 that the House will take up later this week is not a
Path to Prosperity. Rather, it is more accurately a Path to the Past.
Just like President Bush's ill-fated attempt to privatize Social
Security,
[[Page H2578]]
the Path to the Past eviscerates Medicare, forcing retirees to bear the
brunt of cost increases and severely jeopardizing their access to
health care, replacing today's guaranteed access with a limited voucher
system.
Today, thanks to Medicare, every one of America's senior citizens has
access to health care coverage. Before Medicare was enacted in 1965,
roughly half of all seniors suffered without health insurance. The Path
to the Past would send American seniors back to the times of scrambling
to find coverage while always worrying how they will be able to afford
rising health care costs on fixed incomes.
The Republican Path to the Past brings back the doughnut hole in
Medicare part D prescription drug coverage. Under the doughnut hole,
many seniors have been forced to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket
for prescription medication because they weren't covered by part D.
I was proud to fix that inequity and eliminate the doughnut hole
during the previous Congress. Unfortunately, the Republican Path to the
Past brings it back once again, requiring many seniors to pay thousands
of dollars extra for their prescription drugs. That's a past Americans
don't want.
The Republican Path to the Past destroys Medicaid, replacing it with
a vastly limited monetary grant to the States, forcing them to either
reduce benefits to lower-income families or to reduce the number of
eligible families or both. Currently, 34 million children receive
health care through Medicaid.
From 1997 to 2009, the percentage of children without health
insurance dropped from 13.9 percent to 8.2 percent, largely because of
Medicaid. The Republican Path to the Past risks the future of millions
of America's children by risking that health care coverage. That's a
past America does not want.
The Path to the Past incredulously blames rising college tuition on
efforts to make Pell Grants more accessible to kids and would return
the Nation to a system where only the wealthy can afford college.
Contrary to what the Republican budget states, college tuition costs
have been rising long before the expansion of Pell Grants.
In fact, from 2002 to 2007, tuition costs rose 31 percent more than
the rate of inflation, the worst 5-year increase in college costs in
over 30 years.
In response, last year we reformed the student loan program, expanded
the Pell Grant program, and allowed hundreds of thousands of students
the ability to make higher education more affordable. The Republican
Path to the Past returns the Nation to the years of rising tuition
without any relief. That's a past America does not want.
The Republican Path to the Past ignores the economic recovery under
way and indiscriminately slashes investments in ways that Goldman Sachs
said will lower economic growth by 2 percent and increase unemployment
by 1 percent. During the height of the Great Recession, for several
months, 700,000 Americans lost their jobs.
According to Mark Zandi, an economist with Moody's Analytics and an
adviser to Senator McCain's Presidential campaign, those policies would
cost American workers another 700,000 jobs. The Economic Policy
Institute projected a loss of 800,000 jobs, while the Center for
American Progress said it will cost 900,000 jobs. That's a past America
does not want to go back to.
The Republican budget proposal, the Path to the Past, returns us to
the law of the jungle and the survival of the fittest, throwing the
young, the elderly, the sick, and the disadvantaged on their own fates.
That's not an America I believe in.
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