[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 65 (Thursday, May 12, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H3269-H3273]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE ECONOMY AND THE STABILITY OF THE MIDDLE CLASS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 5, 2011, the gentleman from New York (Mr. Tonko) is recognized
for 30 minutes.
Mr. TONKO. Mr. Speaker, the opportunity this evening for the
Democratic Caucus in the House to address this budget and to go forward
with a discussion on our stand on the issues and solutions that we're
proposing is an important opportunity for us to be able to dialogue
here amongst each other on the House floor and also to share that
messaging with the viewing public.
Certainly, the general public out there is watching many of these
proposals. They are concerned about the stability of the middle class.
They're concerned about the economy, concerned about job creation.
We are now well into the 112th session of Congress. We watch as many
weeks and months have passed without one single measure that would
increase jobs in this country coming before the House. Nothing that
deals with the economy, nothing that deals with the retention of jobs
or the job creation situation has been produced here as legislation and
voted upon on the House floor, a rather dismal track record when the
clarion call, the message that resonated from the voting booth to these
Halls of Congress on the Hill in Washington was very clear: Start
growing the economy, stop shrinking the middle class, and people are
concerned about the opportunities that will be passed by. As we walk
through these very difficult times, it is about job creation and
retention.
There's also a concern that there has been this very strong attempt
to make the comfortable even more comfortable with the new Republican
majority in the House. And we'll talk about that. Let's talk about it.
We have a situation where people will allow for corporate loopholes
that cost
[[Page H3270]]
our economy money. They'll allow for a continuation of millionaires and
billionaires to receive tax cuts; they'll advance the reducing of
Medicaid, where two-thirds of those dollars go toward sustaining the
elderly in health care settings; and they want to end Medicare. And all
of this is professed to be some sort of savings in Federal Government.
Well, that is only part of the story. The real truth is that these
savings quickly dissipate. They're gone because they are used as
payment for tax cuts for millionaires, handouts to the oil companies
that sit on historic profit that has been realized, $1 trillion nearly
in profit realized by the big oil companies of this Nation, and that is
the vulgar outcome that has so infuriated the middle class.
As I travel to my district, I hear repeatedly about the concerns to
end Medicare. People will say, we're not ending it, we're fixing it;
that we're not really providing for an end, we're offering, at first
what was a voucher, now it's called ``a transformation.''
Look, as we shift risk from the government to the individual senior
household, we are ending a benefit that has lasted for some four and-a-
half decades, that came about for the very reasons that seniors could
not access an affordable health care plan, that there was cherry-
picking going on, that only the easiest to insure would be covered,
that those who might have come with some preexisting condition would be
passed by, and where the notion of an affordable health care insurance
premium, a policy that was unaffordable, was just beyond the grasp of
our Nation's seniors. And so it's why the program grew in strength and
popularity, and why it has provided stability for our Nation's seniors.
Now, when we look at what's happening here, we'll talk about the many
dynamics, but there are those who professed very boldly that what we're
doing here is exactly what the Congress has in terms of an insurance
policy.
Well, Congress has about 72 cents of its premium costs covered. With
this plan, with this voucher plan initiated in this Republican budget
approved in this House, the Republicans suggest with their plan that it
would be every 32 cents on a dollar covered with their voucher program.
And just what guarantee is there that the senior who shops will, in
fact, land a policy that will cover them? So it's very concerning.
We just recently did a mailing that informed people of the various
reforms that are being proposed. We also solicited their input on what
priorities they believe we should hold in our hearts and minds here as
we move forward, and we've received a great supply of information
already in the very infant days in responding.
{time} 1830
As they come in, they keep growing more and more one-sided.
Let me just hold up what the first few days has produced. We have one
pile here of speaking out against the Medicare end. This is one copy.
We have yet a second pile all received in the first few days of people
receiving their mailing. We saw those two bulky piles. This is the
response in favor of. Well beyond 90 percent of the returns to date is:
don't mess with benefits.
Now, mindful, when we were addressing the Affordable Care Act, when
we were holding town forums, when we were holding some 3,000 to 4,000
forums across this country discussing the health care reforms, how to
improve it, what exactly is included, what the priorities ought to be,
there were clarion calls of ending Medicare, of death panels, and all
sorts of risks to the seniors, and denying access and affordability.
Well, we proved that that was not the case, that it was misinformation.
This one walks right into that argument, because it ends Medicare. It
ends Medicare and it turns it into a voucher system, and it has
everyone shopping in the private sector insurance market to get their
coverage. We can't allow this to happen.
We have seen, since the initiation of Medicare, the growth in
premiums in the private sector market, and that equates to some 5,000
percent. That's a huge increase. But there are friends out there that
helped to bring the wrong candidates to this House, and I think it's
time for them to come forward, as they believe, to get some sort of
return on that investment.
Well, we cannot afford to have that investment come down onto the
senior community, because we know it will be devastating. So we are
going to continue to do battle to fight that Medicare issue. To end
Medicare would be devastating to our Nation's seniors. Can we make it
stronger? Absolutely. Can we provide more stability? Absolutely. That
began in the ACA, the Affordable Care Act. We are going to continue to
work on it. But seniors did not tell me--and I talked to my colleagues,
they did not tell colleagues across this Nation: go back to Washington.
We want to return to Washington. End our Medicare program. They said
absolutely the reverse, and they knew they were benefited by it.
There are a number of others that attacked the middle class, working
families of this country. We are going to work to make certain that
there is not an attack on the middle class, because that attack drains
worthy programs of dollars and then gets transferred over to payments
for millionaire tax cuts, billionaire tax cuts, Big Oil handouts, and
corporate loopholes to be paid for.
We are joined this evening by a very good friend who has entered the
House this year as a freshman Member. He is the former mayor of
Providence, Rhode Island. He now represents Rhode Island's First
Congressional District. He has been an outspoken voice. I am impressed
with David Cicilline's absolute impassioned voice to save Medicare. He
has been outspoken on the House floor, and he has been outspoken in our
caucus. It is a pleasure, Representative Cicilline, to have you here
this evening to talk about this Medicare situation and perhaps what you
are hearing in your district.
Mr. CICILLINE. I thank the gentleman for his kind words and for
giving me an opportunity to be a part of this discussion tonight and
for your leadership on your importance of preserving Medicare for
seniors in this country. I hear from constituents in my district about
the importance of strengthening and protecting Medicare.
To give you an idea of how important this issue is in Rhode Island,
more than 170,000 Rhode Islanders rely upon Medicare for a reliable,
quality, and low-cost hospital and medical insurance as well as
prescription drug coverage. More than 65,000 seniors and people with
disabilities in Rhode Island rely upon Medicaid coverage for their
long-term care.
When I participated in the debate, and actually when I listened
during the debate on this very floor about the Republican budget
proposal and about what it did to Medicare, my friends on the other
side of the aisle said this will strengthen Medicare. And I thought,
how could they make that claim? Because I knew what their proposal did
was ending Medicare as we know it, as a guarantee for people 55 and
under; and it ended this important safety net and turned it into a
voucher system for our seniors.
Now, I unfortunately no longer have my grandparents; they have all
passed. But the idea that my grandmother or grandfather in their later
years would have to go into the private insurance market and buy
insurance because they would have lost the protection of Medicare is
something which I think nobody should be prepared to accept.
What is even more disturbing is that what the Republicans passed in
that budget when they ended Medicare as we know it also resulted in
increased costs for our seniors. See, the difference is nothing in
their proposal will reduce costs of health care. That's really what we
need to do. We don't need to shift the cost to our seniors and visit
that problem upon them, because then they have the burden of enduring
additional health care costs. We need to obviously eliminate fraud and
waste and abuse, invest in wellness and prevention, invest in
information technology, all the things that will drive down health care
costs. But shifting the burden to our seniors should not be the answer.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office--this isn't Republicans
and Democrats. This is nonpartisan--they said that this Republican
budget, which was passed by the Republicans, would actually increase
health care costs for our seniors, provide less costs and be more
expensive, and it would restore the doughnut hole and make prescription
drugs more expensive for our
[[Page H3271]]
seniors. And in addition to that, when you take their budget proposal
in the aggregate, it would add $8 trillion to the deficit over the next
10 years. So it doesn't even reduce the deficit.
We all recognize we have got to reduce the deficit; we have to cut
spending. We have to be serious about it, but we can't do it at the
expense of our seniors, of protecting Medicare, strengthening Medicare
so that our seniors have access to quality health care, and that's a
responsibility that we have.
There are lots of ways that we have to look at every part of this
budget, eliminate fraud and waste, get rid of programs that don't work,
be serious about looking at our military spending and what is happening
in Afghanistan; we are spending $2 billion a week or more than that
now. Look at the billions of dollars that we are giving in subsidies to
big oil companies. They proposed in their budget another tax cut for
the richest Americans, the millionaires and billionaires. At the same
time, we are ending Medicare as we know it. It is the wrong priorities.
We can do better than this. Our seniors deserve better than this.
I thank the distinguished gentleman from New York for giving me an
opportunity to share my observation that Rhode Island seniors are
depending on me and this Congress to protect and strengthen Medicare.
They expect us to deal with this deficit in a responsible way, be
serious about budget cutting, but maintain our commitment to our
seniors.
Mr. TONKO. Thank you, Representative Cicilline. And, again, thank you
for your outspokenness, because we need to make certain that all of
America is involved in this dialogue, because this is a critical
tipping point in this Nation's history. We can raid on the middle class
and cut domestic programs that feed their very heart and soul, or we
can do it intelligently, where we share the pain.
Speaking of sharing the pain, a budget, as you indicate, is nothing
more, nothing less than our values, our principles, our priorities. And
we have seen where the priorities lie with the majority of this House.
They have said it is about Big Oil first; it is about corporate
loopholes first. It is about millionaires and billionaires first. The
people now see this. They see this because they know they are going to
have to pay two times what they pay today for Medicare coverage out of
their pocket. They know it's shifting risk from government to the
senior citizen household, the senior citizen individual. They know
that, by the year 2030, triple the amount of money, plus the risk of
going out there and making certain that you can find a carrier that
will cover you, because they will put your coverage at the whims of the
insurance company. If they want to cover some of your health care
needs, they will. If not, they won't. And that is really what will ache
here. What really happened was that we are taking this moral compass
that has been expressed by a program like Medicare and denouncing it,
saying that, look, go fend for yourself, find your program.
What I find most generous about my district seniors, and I'm certain
this is across the country, coast to coast, they are saying: I'm not
just talking about myself or my generation. I am talking about my
children and grandchildren. We know what comfort, what security, what
stability this brought our household.
{time} 1840
What comfort does it bring to adult children to know that their
relatives, their parents are sitting in a situation that is responding
with dignity?
And when you talk about the principles, about the priorities, look at
the road to ruin. They call it the ``path to prosperity'' with the Ryan
plan with the Republican budget. The road to ruin, as I refer to it,
really takes money from our seniors on Medicare, $4.3 trillion, that
then goes and transfers itself over to, guess what? $4.2 trillion worth
of benefits for Big Oil and millionaires and billionaires.
So the scales are balanced in terms of where the dollars are, but the
real pain here is that they get emptied from the seniors' coffers,
programs that address a basic core need of health care, and then get
emptied into the pockets of millionaires and billionaires and Big Oil.
I know our friend from California, Representative John Garamendi, who
is always leading us on the floor with wonderful, interesting
discussion, has something to say about big oil companies, and it speaks
to this flipping from one side of the scale to the other, where an
equal amount of money found in savings by cutting the middle class, by
cutting our seniors is now going to be spent. It is not savings. It was
accruing the dollars necessary to just transfer over in some sort of
way and some sort of painful way that finds itself with oil companies,
millionaires and billionaires.
Representative Garamendi, please.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Mr. Tonko, thank you very much for what you are doing,
bringing up this critically important issue. As you were saying,
nothing is more important than the question of who we are as Americans
and our values; what is it that we really care about and how do we
structure, how do we create a society that reflects those values.
Before 1964, the largest segment of the American population that was
in abject poverty were seniors. They had no health care. They couldn't
get insurance. They were basically the poor of the poor. But as a
result of the fundamental goodness of America, Medicare was created, a
medical insurance program for seniors so that they would have available
to them doctors' services and hospital services. And it worked.
Now, I was the insurance commissioner in California for 8 years,
elected statewide by 34 million people to oversee, to regulate the
insurance companies. And in that process we were looking and watching
the Medicare program. It wasn't private insurance, but it was part of
the health insurance system; and we knew that it worked.
It is exceedingly efficient. It works for less than 2 percent. You
got a nationwide insurance policy. Wherever you are in America, you get
the exact same insurance policy. Doctors know how to bill; hospitals
know how to bill. It is efficient; it is effective. It works. More than
that, it is an expression of the basic goodness of America.
I was surprised, shocked, angered when the Republican budget came
forward and proposed that Medicare be terminated for all who want to
live to the age of 65. Terminated. Ended. That wasn't all that the
Republicans proposed. They proposed that not only would it be
terminated, but that all future Medicare enrollees would be given a
voucher worth about one-half the cost of insurance and told to go to
the insurance companies and buy a policy.
Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Time out, Mr. Republican. Time out.
What are you saying? You are going to take the population that has
preexisting conditions--there are very few that are 65 years of age
that don't have preexisting conditions--and you are going to turn them
over to the most voracious sharks in this Nation, the health insurance
companies? No way. No way. They are going to get chewed up, spit out
and uninsured, or else charged a small fortune. This is the most un-
American, the most inhumane thing that could be imagined for seniors,
for tomorrow's seniors. We cannot let it happen.
Then, on top of that, in the very next breath they proposed to
continue billions of dollars of subsidies, taking money literally out
of the pockets of seniors and working men and women and giving it to
Big Oil, who happens to have big profits, just as you have on your card
up there. Not only Big Oil, but the wealthiest people in America,
people whose incomes are $1 million, $10 million, $1 billion a year
income, and give them an additional tax break, so that in 10 years it
is $4 trillion of tax breaks to the big oil companies and those, not
millionaires, but those whose annual income is in the millions. What is
going on here?
Mr. TONKO. Representative Garamendi, if you will suffer an
interruption and yield, you talk about those Big Oil profits. You talk
about the trillions they are willing to spend. And then they have the
audacity to say it is a spending problem.
Well, where are we spending? We are making the comfortable more
comfortable. With those Big Oil handouts, up to 90 percent, according
to studies released, up to 90 percent are going toward bonuses for
executives in the oil industry--up to 90 percent. What quantifiable
societal good is there from
[[Page H3272]]
these handouts? They are mindless. And today, today, someone from the
industry was quoted as saying to not offer these handouts is un-
American. It is unbelievable.
Mr. CICILLINE. If the gentleman will yield, I think what is just
shocking is that that claim was made today, and really what is un-
American is to end Medicare. The reality is Medicare reflects our
values as a country. We decided as a Nation that we wanted to ensure
that our seniors in their final years, that they have lived a life and
played by the rules, done what is right, that they can live with
security and dignity and without the fear, the anxiety of worrying how
they would have access to basic health care, because we decided as a
country that we wanted to ensure, to guarantee that our seniors could
live with dignity and with proper health care.
The idea of ending that and requiring them to go buy it with a
voucher, that is un-American.
Mr. TONKO. Right. And when you look at the statistics, the median
household salary for our seniors is $19,000; the average individual
salary is $19,000. When you look at the onerous outcome of having to
reach for thousands more dollars out of your pocket on a base of a
median of $19,000, when we are looking at millionaires and billionaires
getting even more assistance, that is spending. So let's not get off
track here. It is spending.
Where are we going to invest? Investing in health care, a basic core
need, when premiums in the last decade have risen over 130 percent and
where the administrative costs of the private sector and insurance are
higher, where they are much lower in Medicare, where the advertising
costs aren't there, where we know we have had coverage. And now we are
going: here is your voucher payment. It is not going to be indexed
appropriately so that with time it becomes less and less valuable.
This is the kind of un-American behavior that we are witnessing here
and that people get upset about saying they are lies, they are fear
tactics. This is what is happening. It ends Medicare.
Once you remove the risk that falls with government and transfer it
over to our Nation's seniors, you have ended the core principle. When
you deny a given bit of certainty and stability to our seniors, you
have ended Medicare. When you are going to inflate the cost of health
care, you have ended Medicare. And we have now taken that money and
transferred it over to the big oil companies.
Representative Garamendi.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Thank you for yielding. If you add to that
destruction, the termination of Medicare, the way in which the
Republicans have already voted for on this floor to end the Health Care
Reform Act, which regulated the insurance companies and said the
insurance companies could no longer discriminate based upon preexisting
conditions, discriminate based upon age and whether you are a woman or
a man, all of those protections that are in the health care reform law
would be terminated.
So not only are you taking the Medicare program and ending it, giving
the seniors a voucher that is perhaps half of the cost of a health
insurance policy, you are eliminating the restrictions that were placed
on the insurance companies for discriminating against people that have
preexisting conditions.
{time} 1850
So you've literally taken these people and thrown them to the sharks.
On top of that, the rest of the proposal was to take the Medicaid
program, which is health insurance for impoverished children, and give
a block grant to the State that's worth about half of the cost, a $700
billion cut out of that program for children's health care, and you
say, What's this? This is not us. This is not America. These are harsh,
cruel programs that are being foisted upon the American citizens.
Mr. TONKO. Representative Garamendi, if you will, that Medicaid cut
also will impact the Nation's seniors because when they're in
institutional settings we know about 66 percent of the expenditure is
for our seniors. Again, we understand the compassion that is required.
We know the American spirit to respond to those who have served society
so well. And in their golden years they need the assistance. But every
attempt that is being made here, we have tried every which way to
inform the public of the attack on Medicare, the attack on Social
Security, to privatize Social Security. This is about giving Big Oil,
big insurance companies, big banks more business. This is like cashing
in on being good to some people here. That is not how this government
should be guided. It should be guided on the principles of providing
the basic core needs in a way that's most effective, most efficient.
We have even attempted--the House was addressing the Republican
version of the budget. I introduced an amendment on the Budget
Committee where I serve and presented it before the Budget Committee,
and it went down by party vote to stop the attack on Medicare, to end
Medicare. There was an absolute amendment that said, Let's pull out
ending Medicare from your budget plan. It was denied. Then, I traveled
to the Rules Committee and attempted once more before the bill came to
the House, Let's stop the effort to end Medicare. It was denied at the
Rules Committee again with the Republican majority at the Rules
Committee.
So now we're visiting this situation. And the budget was approved in
this House with this raid on the middle class and the attack on the
values of the middle class, of working families. It is really
disturbing that the most comfortable continue to get that effort made
their way. And especially when history speaks--and speaks so abundantly
well to us. It should resonate. When we put people to work with FDR's
programs back years ago, decades ago, the result was 8.5 million people
put to work and public projects built that still serve us well today.
JFK investing in global technology to win the space race. Those are
examples of things that worked. LBJ promoting a Medicare program. Now
we're repeating this driving the car into the ditch scenario.
Reaganomics and its trickle-down didn't work. The Bush II Presidency
and its cuts to the millionaire, billionaire companies didn't work. Why
would we revisit that as we crawl out of the most painful recession and
propose ending Medicare--ending Medicare--denying dignity to our
Nation's seniors and avoiding the fundamental responsibility of good
government, efficient government, which is what I think the voters
asked for in November, not this sort of pain.
Representative Cicilline.
Mr. CICILLINE. I thank the gentleman. In addition to that, the other
part of the Republican budget that passed in this Chamber was also to
restore the doughnut hole; to make prescription drugs more expensive
for our seniors and to eliminate the free preventative care. I know,
from talking to seniors in my own district, there are too many seniors
faced with a choice of, do I buy my groceries, or do I buy the
prescription drugs that are necessary to keep me healthy. No senior in
America should be faced with that choice. And this bill, this budget
that the Republicans passed, will raise prescription costs for our
seniors.
Mr. TONKO. Thank you.
Representative Garamendi, we have about 4 minutes remaining in our
one-half hour here of dialogue.
Mr. GARAMENDI. I'll take a lightning minute here.
It really comes down to a question of: Where do you stand? Who do you
stand for? It's very, very clear. If there's ever a dichotomy and a
clear opportunity to see where you stand, it is in the Republican
budget. Let's be very clear. It terminates Medicare; gives seniors a
voucher that is worth perhaps half of the cost of insurance; takes $700
billion out of Medicaid. And that is, as you said, the long-term care
for seniors in nursing homes. And it continues the tax cuts for people
whose income is millions, billions; continues the tax subsidies for Big
Oil--$4 billion, $5 billion a year to companies that have made over a
trillion dollars in the last decade. And just in this quarter, Exxon,
$10.7 billion; Oxy, $1.6 billion; Conoco, $2.1 billion. This is one
quarter, 3 months of earnings. Billions and billions of dollars. And
then they want to continue.
Where do you stand? Do you stand for the working men and women, the
seniors, those people that need to be able to get health care, or do
you stand for the very, very rich and the big oil companies? The
Republicans have made it
[[Page H3273]]
clear. There's a difference here between where we stand as Democrats
and where they stand as Republicans.
Mr. TONKO. Thank you, Representative Garamendi. I appreciate you and
Representative Cicilline joining in this important half-hour of
discussion. But I can clearly state that no one that I talked to in
this House, no Representative, was hearing advocacy to end Medicare
during our campaigns last year. I didn't hear one individual tell me
that--senior, non-senior. I didn't hear anyone ask me to give more
profits, more handouts, to big oil companies. I didn't hear one person
say, Protect the corporate loopholes for corporations out there. I
didn't hear anyone say, Hand more tax cuts to millionaires and
billionaires.
I did hear, Make my budget work at home. I need the basics. I did
hear, I can't survive with the situation as it is. I did hear, We need
jobs. I did hear, Start growing our economy. Stop shrinking the middle
class.
Well, evidently this majority was not listening. There was anger--
undeniable anger, understandable anger--that existed out there. But
this is not this quantification that they were looking for. They did
not want to see this as a result, as an outcome. I think we need to
continue to fight this effort to end Medicare, and we're going to
continue that fight.
With that, I thank the gentlemen for joining me in this half hour.
I yield back the balance of my time, Mr. Speaker.
____________________