[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 73 (Wednesday, May 25, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3296-S3298]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE BUDGET
Mr. GRASSLEY. Madam President, on February 14 President Obama
delivered his budget to the Congress. I often describe to my
constituents that Washington is an island surrounded by reality.
Nowhere is this more apparent than with President Obama's February 14
budget. In presenting and defending his budget, President Obama and his
staff have said his budget ``lives within our means'' and that ``it
will not add to the debt,'' and that ``we are not going to spend any
more money than we are taking in.''
Obviously all you have to do is study the budget and you come to the
conclusion that these astonishing statements do not equal the facts.
The Congressional Budget Office recently projected the deficit for
fiscal year 2011, the year we are in, will exceed $1.5 trillion. This
is on top of a $1 trillion-plus deficit in 2009 and 2010. Today, of
every dollar spent, more than 40 cents is borrowed. Our country is on
an unsustainable path. But you would not realize that by looking at the
President's budget proposal. It does not recognize the serious fiscal
crisis our country faces. What it represents is the status quo.
Over the 10-year period, President Obama's budget adds more than $10
trillion in publicly held debt and $14 trillion in gross debt. Does
that sound like on February 14 he put before us a budget such that we
are going to live within our means and not spend any more than we take
in?
During this period of time, going up to 2021, debt held by the public
would reach 87 percent of GDP, compared to a 50-year average of 35
percent. According to the Congressional Budget Office, ``If those
trends were continued beyond 2021, the resulting path of the Federal
debt would be unsustainable.''
In fact, CBO estimated that by the year 2040, under President Obama's
budget, debt held by the public would be 117 percent. Is this the
budget the Senate Democrats will support? Is this the fiscal path we
are going to endorse? While President Obama claims we are living within
our means, the smallest annual deficit will be $748 billion. His budget
does not even begin to put our country on the right path. The final 3
years of his budget have annual deficits totaling over $1 trillion.
As former Comptroller General David Walker has stated, our country
was founded on principles such as limited government, individual
liberty, and fiscal responsibility.
The President's budget falls short on each of these three principles.
It increases spending. It grows government as a percentage of our
economy. It is clearly fiscally irresponsible, and because of the
legacy of deficits and debt it creates, it will undoubtedly infringe
upon the liberties of future generations.
In 2006, then-Senator Obama argued against raising the debt limit. He
believed, at that time, the very need to raise the debt limit was a
sign of leadership failure. By his own standard then, President Obama
is not living up to his standard. So is that leadership failure? Would
he admit that today? His ``no'' vote in that year was to make a point
about needing to get serious about fiscal discipline. We are in the
third year of President Obama's Presidency. We are in the midst of the
third consecutive year of $1 trillion of annual deficit. Deficits have
gotten larger, not smaller.
Of course, I recognize many of my Democratic colleagues will come to
the floor and argue they support the policies President Obama put forth
in a speech later on--I guess in April--at George Washington
University. Unfortunately, for the Democrats, the leader of their party
doesn't deliver speeches in legislative text. Speeches alone aren't
going to solve the big problems we face in this Nation. We need serious
solutions to our country's very serious problems. We need real
leadership. The future generations of this country deserve no less, and
that is what House budget Chairman Ryan has offered. That is what our
colleagues on our side of the aisle, such as Senator Toomey and Senator
Paul, are going to offer to the Senate.
What have the Democrats offered to address the looming fiscal crisis?
The answer is no resolution at all. So I have a blank page,
representing the fact that they have no plan whatsoever. Are they going
to allow a debate so they can offer their ideas to address our fiscal
calamities? We just heard the Senator from Nebraska postulate that is
not going to happen; that we are having a series of votes, but they are
for show, not for real. The American people have sent 53 Democratic
Senators to Washington. A budget can pass the Senate with just 51
votes. It doesn't take the supermajority 60 votes that so many issues
on the floor require if we are going to get to finality. So far, we can
see they have shirked their responsibility--nothing.
It has been more than 750 days since Senate Democrats offered a
budget. What is the delay? I want to ask them: Where is your budget? I
suppose they will argue that our Nation's fiscal situation doesn't
require a budget or, perhaps, they have simply run out of ideas to
address our deficits and our debt.
ADM Mike Mullen, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said
earlier this year that our debt--meaning our national debt, our
accumulative debt--is the greatest threat to our national security.
Surely, the Senate Democratic leadership would want to put an honest
plan forward to address that threat. They don't even want to debate a
budget.
This exercise is on a motion to proceed to a number of budgets, none
of which were written by the Democratic majority. I guess they intend
to vote against proceeding. They don't even want to debate a budget.
Well, by this time, most of the time in the last 35 years, we have had
a budget through the Senate. Instead of leading, they would rather
demagogue the serious efforts put forth by Republicans. They are not
going to stand and defend the defenseless budget their President
submitted to Congress just 3 months ago. They are not going to write
their own budget. It is still blank. They are not even going to vote to
allow debate on budgets that were drafted by others. So are we
witnessing a leadership failure similar to the one Senator Obama
referred to in 2006, in his speech on the Senate floor? The Democratic
majority would rather demagogue Medicare than produce and defend their
own budget.
I presume there will be a lot of speeches in this town today, with
[[Page S3297]]
Democrats hitting their chests saying: We ran an election in New York
State yesterday based upon the fact that Republicans want to kill
Medicare. Well, I wish to put forth the fact that if we do nothing, as
the trustees have said recently, there isn't going to be any Medicare
in 9 years. I can put forth ample evidence that ObamaCare puts Medicare
on a path to the rationing of care and reducing the number of doctors
who are going to take Medicare patients. Already, Medicare is on a path
to destruction if we don't intervene and do something about it. The
sooner we intervene, the better. We ought to be intervening now in a
bipartisan way instead of all the talk about partisanship and
destroying it. There are some people in this Congress who know Medicare
is a problem and the sooner we deal with it, the easier it will be to
deal with it.
Medicare is a very important part of America's social fabric. It was
intended to be that in 1966, and it is still that today. I intend to
work to make sure it stays as a part of our social fabric. It is a
commitment made to seniors today, and it is a commitment made to people
who are not yet seniors today. It is a commitment made to all for the
future. So it is very important that we, as stewards of the Medicare
Program, take serious our charge to make sure it remains for future
seniors.
With that in mind, I come to the floor to call out the most dangerous
threat to the Medicare Program we face on the floor this week. Let's be
clear. It is not the budget resolution authored by Congressman Paul
Ryan and passed by the House of Representatives. The most serious
threat to the Medicare Program this week is those who propose to do
nothing or offer no plan whatsoever for saving Medicare. Doing nothing
is the most serious threat to Medicare. For all the talk about killing
Medicare as we know it, the Democrats' do-nothing budget I have held up
so often--the do-nothing budget--is the surest way to kill Medicare as
we know it.
The folks coming to the Senate floor with nothing in their hands but
criticism of these budget resolutions are irresponsible. By attacking
the House budget resolution while proposing absolutely nothing, the
Democrats are plunging their collective heads into the sand such as
these ostriches sometimes are described as doing--ostriches acting as
though everything with Medicare is fine and that doing nothing is a
viable option.
Let's look at the facts. Last week, the CMS Actuary--and this is a
professional person. He is not a political person but the President's
Actuary--submitted his annual report on the fiscal health of the
Medicare Program. Frankly, his conclusions are very disturbing. The
Actuary confirms that the Medicare Program is already contributing to
the Federal deficit. It is spending more than it takes in, and it will
continue to do so throughout the coming decade. The Actuary found--this
professional person, this person that is the President's Actuary--found
that Medicare will run out of money by the year 2024--5 years faster
than his projection last year. For the sixth straight year, the report
issued a funding warning showing that the Medicare Program is taking a
disproportionate share of its funding from general revenue, thus
crowding out programs such as defense and education. The situation is
only going to get worse.
In 1965, when Medicare was created, baby boomers retiring today were
then just teenagers. Today, we have 10,000 baby boomers retiring every
day, with fewer and fewer workers paying into Medicare to support these
additional retirees. The average couple turning 65 today paid over
$109,000 into Medicare over their lifetime but will receive over
$343,000 in benefits. Stop to think of that. Everybody wonders why
Medicare might be in trouble today. The average person retiring today
has paid in $109,000 but will receive about $343,000 in benefits. That
just does not add up as a sustainable program. Anybody who says we
don't have to do anything about Medicare and it will take care of
itself--well, we can see how misleading that is.
When Medicare was created in 1966, the average American lived to be
age 70. Today, thanks to incredible advances in medical care, the
average American lives to be 79. These are the facts. So now, knowing
these facts, is the time for Congress to recognize the reality of
Medicare's fiscal crisis--and not just recognize it but recognize it
and then do something about it.
Put simply, Medicare is unsustainable without serious, thoughtful
action. This blank sheet of paper, a budget not being offered, is not a
serious, thoughtful action. To say otherwise is to ignore the facts and
to stick your head in the sand.
The Ryan budget, as it relates to Medicare, has had much discussion
lately. It is simply a blueprint. Even if this page were filled in, a
budget never becomes law; it never goes to the President of the United
States. It is a discipline for the Congress of the United States. It
does not become law. So anybody who says voting for a budget is voting
to do something to Medicare is crazy. Actual policy, as we know, is
going to be determined by other committees, other than the Budget
Committee. In the House, it is most often the Ways and Means Committee.
In the Senate, it is the Senate Finance Committee. Those are the
committees that write the bill and that can say what is happening or
not happening to Medicare. Anyone telling the public that if this
budget blueprint is adopted, it will be a law doesn't understand how
the legislative process works.
But this vote isn't even about a budget blueprint. The debate we are
having is about a simple motion on whether we ought to even debate a
budget. If the Democrats were willing to proceed to an honest and open
debate, we could talk about where we want to go with the Medicare
Program at that time. If the Democrats were willing to proceed to an
honest and open debate, we could debate steps to save the program. If
the Democrats were willing to proceed to an honest and open debate, we
could have amendments to improve the resolution as offered. Of course,
the Democrats are not willing to proceed to an open and honest debate.
I agree that changing the nature of Medicare is a significant step.
Requiring people who are 10 years away from retirement to expect to pay
more for their health care in retirement is a significant change in
policy. It should be thoughtfully considered, however, in the context
of Medicare's serious fiscal difficulties. They aren't going to go
away.
Describing this policy as ending Medicare for seniors is
irresponsible and factually false. People who engage in this type of
demagoguery are endangering coverage for the very people whom they
claim to support because they continue to propose nothing. Where is the
Democrats' bill? So far, this is it: a blank piece of paper, producing
nothing.
I have great respect for the chairman of the Senate Budget Committee.
I know he has tried to produce a budget. But, apparently, his
leadership thinks that demagoguing Republican budgets is far more
politically profitable than standing behind one of their own plans, so
they have squashed all his efforts to produce a budget. Even though we
know the Democrats have turned into ostriches when it comes to saving
Medicare, we are fortunate to have a record over the past several years
to examine.
So let's look at ObamaCare, passed solely in a partisan vote in 2010.
It took a little more than $500 billion right out of the Medicare
Program to fund a new entitlement. So Medicare is in trouble. Take away
$500 billion from it, and start up a new program. Does that sound
fiscally responsible? I have no doubt some folks may come to the floor
to argue that the Medicare savings extended the life of the Medicare
Program. But every reputable source that has analyzed that claim has
appropriately tagged it as double counting.
The CMS Actuary, whom I referred to in the past, today continues to
call some of the productivity cuts made by the Democrats in their
health care reform bill unsustainable and unrealistic. And I say--he
does not say it--I say it is going to bring rationing. So down the
road, what sort of health care are seniors going to have? It is not
going to be what they know today.
Of course, we all know the Democrats failed to resolve the
sustainable growth rate problem, which is a formula for doctors'
reimbursement, so the problem of physician payments continues to haunt
the fiscal future of Medicare. If we do not do anything this year,
[[Page S3298]]
Medicare physicians will face a 30-percent pay cut. Imagine that. Today
many Medicare patients already are being denied the care and personal
choice they deserve because the AMA, the American Medical Association,
has said one in three primary doctors is limiting Medicare patients,
and more than one in eight of those doctors is forced to deny Medicare
patients altogether.
Our seniors already face the pain of a broken Medicare system. Yet
the Democrats remain ostriches with their heads in the sand because
they have no Medicare solutions they want to offer.
Perhaps I am being too hard on the Democrats. President Obama--
perhaps speaking for the Democrats or perhaps not--has put an option on
the table for addressing Medicare spending. He did it in a speech at
George Washington University on December 13. Of course, we will not be
able to vote on that here today because, as Senator McConnell said
yesterday, you cannot vote for a speech. But at least we should
consider the option the President put on the table.
In his speech, President Obama suggested we should control costs in
Medicare by tasking the Independent Payment Advisory Board that was set
up under ObamaCare to do even more than what we proposed a year and a
half ago when the bill was passed.
You might ask, What is the Independent Payment Advisory Board in
ObamaCare? Well, it was created by the Democrats' health care bill. It
is a 15-member panel of unelected advisers who would make binding
recommendations on how to reduce Medicare spending when spending is
projected to exceed a certain level. Effectively, their recommendations
have the force of law without congressional intervention to replace the
cuts they might suggest and that under the law would take a 60-percent
majority. And you know it is very difficult to get 60 votes in this
body for any one thing.
That law says the board cannot make decisions that directly relate to
premiums, deductibles, or copayments that Medicare beneficiaries pay.
It says the board cannot change the eligibility criteria for Medicare
benefits. So then, what can the board do, you may ask? Well, it is
going to zero in on provider payments, doctor payments.
I want to repeat a statistic I quoted earlier because after the
payment review board gets done, you are going to have more than the one
in three primary doctors not taking Medicare patients that presently is
the situation. We have one out of eight doctors denying Medicare
patients altogether. In other words, they are not going to see Medicare
patients; and that is today. It is going to get worse when this payment
review board gets done.
According to the Joint Economic Committee, today Medicare allows
medical providers to collect 89 percent of the cost of services
provided to seniors. Under the President's proposal, by 2022, Medicare
providers will only be allowed to collect 66 percent of the cost of
services provided to seniors. Reductions will clearly restrict seniors'
access to quality health care.
Let me sum up what we do know about the Democrats' actions on
Medicare because it is already on a path to destruction. So, of course,
I get a little bit upset when I hear people on the other side of the
aisle saying Republicans want to do away with Medicare, when it is part
of the social fabric of America and we want to keep it as part of the
social fabric of America and we want to do it not only because it is a
Federal program, but we want to do it because it is tied in with a lot
of corporate retirement health plans where it becomes a primary payer
and the corporate health plan becomes a secondary or additional payer.
I sum up by saying, they have enacted already $500 billion worth of
cuts to fund a new entitlement called ObamaCare. Many of those cuts are
described by the independent CMS Actuary as unsustainable. They have
yet to find a way to fix the doctor reimbursement formula called the
sustainable growth rate. And still, the President has proposed further
reducing payments to providers.
Of course, what is that going to do for seniors in America? It is
going to reduce access. This will make it harder for seniors to find
providers willing to treat them. This will drive some providers out of
the business of providing services to seniors. In other words, they
cannot afford it.
There is one simple word to describe this approach, and it is a word
I do not take lightly. The word is ``rationing'' of health care for
seniors in America. It may not be direct overt rationing, but you have
to have your head buried very deeply in the sand not to realize that is
going to be the outcome of policies already put in place by this
President through ObamaCare. And then they want to accuse us of
destroying Medicare?
So I get back to what today's debate is all about. I think we ought
to seriously be having a legitimate floor debate rather than a series
of political show votes today. I will vote for the Senate to begin
debate on the Ryan budget and the other Republican budgets as they are
offered because I do not have a chance to vote on anything from that
side of the aisle because, see, it is a blank sheet of paper. There is
nothing there that the majority party--not the minority party; they are
the majority party--has suggested. I will vote to begin debate, not
that I support any of their budgets in their entirety. I will vote to
begin debate because our fiscal situation demands serious efforts or
giving serious considerations, and in no area, as I have made clear in
my remarks today, is this more critical than in Medicare because
Medicare is on a path to bankruptcy.
People who support the Medicare Program and care about those who will
count on that program today and for many years to come are willing to
put serious plans on the table for debate. It is our responsibility to
ensure Medicare's survival for future seniors. Doing nothing is worse
for Medicare. The surest way to kill Medicare as we know it is the
Democrats' do-nothing plan. Demagoguery is irresponsible. So I would
suggest: Pull your head out of the sand and join a real debate to save
Medicare for the future.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the
order for the quorum call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that
following my remarks, Senator McCaskill be recognized to speak for up
to 15 minutes, and following her remarks Senator Sessions be recognized
to speak for up to 20 minutes.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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