[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 131 (Wednesday, September 7, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5351-S5352]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTH CARE
Mr. BARRASSO. Madam President, I come to the floor because this week
President Obama is going to present his new jobs plan to the American
people and to all of us. I am certain we will hear a lot of talk and a
lot of promises.
I remember when former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi famously announced
in 2010 their White House health care summit. I sat around the table at
that summit. In the discussion, she said the President's new health
care law would create 4 million jobs. Here is exactly what former
Speaker Pelosi promised on February 25, 2010. She said:
. . . this bill is not only about the health security of
America, it's about jobs. In its life it will create 4
million jobs--400,000 jobs almost immediately.
I ask, where are the jobs? The fact is, the President's health care
law didn't create jobs. As a physician, I have come to the floor every
week since the health care law has been signed and have given a
doctor's second opinion about this health care law and why I believe it
is bad for patients, bad for providers--the nurses and the doctors who
take care of those patients--and terrible for the taxpayers.
Here we are 17 months after the President signed his health care plan
into law and the American people have yet to see job growth anywhere
near the figures promised by Nancy Pelosi. In fact, the Bureau of Labor
Statistics reported last week the American economy generated a whopping
zero jobs during the month of August. This is sobering news when we
have 9.1 percent unemployment in America.
The New York Times, on September 3, had an editorial called ``The
Jobs Crisis,'' and let me read from it. It says:
The August employment report, released on Friday, is bleak
on all counts, but at least it leaves no doubt that the
United States is in the grip of a severe and worsening jobs
crisis. That should lend a sense of urgency to the speech on
jobs that President Obama plans to deliver this week.
The speech is scheduled for tomorrow night. The New York Times goes
on to say:
The economy added no jobs in August--zero--and the anemic
numbers for June and July were revised downward. The
unemployment rate is stuck at 9.1 percent, but it would be
16.2 percent if it included the swelling ranks of those who
find only part-time work and the millions who have given up
looking for jobs that simply do not exist.
Here we are looking at this sobering news, and it seems the only
connection between the health care law and the jobs market in America
is that the job creators--the people who create jobs in this country--
made it very clear they cannot afford the President's new health care
law. Month after month we hear from more people in the private sector
who explain they will either have to fire people or stop providing
coverage in order to comply with the significant expenses of the new
health care law. Let me repeat. This law encourages job creators not to
create jobs but to fire workers, not to hire workers.
To get around this problem in the short term, the administration
began doing something I did not anticipate when the health care law was
signed. They began to grant waivers from the President's health care
law. They said: Oh, it doesn't apply to you. It doesn't apply to you.
Come and apply for a waiver. During the month of August--this past
month--the administration, once again, granted another round of waivers
from the President's health care law. There were another 73 waivers
allowing 105,000 people to get out of
[[Page S5352]]
the mandates of the Obama health care law.
Since October of 2010, the Obama administration has granted over
1,500 annual benefit limit waivers. Now they are granting them for 3
years. These waivers now cover over 3.4 million Americans. So the law
and the mandates don't have to apply to them with regard to the
benefits. Whom have over 50 percent of these waivers gone to? They have
gone to union people, people who have gotten their health care through
a union health plan. These are the same people who supported the
President's health care law. It is startling that even unions cannot
afford the President's law.
Remember Nancy Pelosi saying: First, we have to pass it before you
get to find out what is in it. As more and more Americans have found
out what is in the health care law, they say we do not want this to
apply to us. In fact, the Service Employees International Union said
the law would be financially impossible; that it is financially
impossible for them to comply with. I don't think any job creator or
American family should have to bear financially impossible costs
because of the President's health care law. Each time this
administration releases yet another round of its health care law
waivers, it reminds the American people how fatally flawed the
President's new law is.
As the President prepares for his speech tomorrow night, he needs to
take a hard look at his health care law. He needs to face the
unfortunate reality that his law actually makes it harder and more
expensive for the job creators of this country to hire more people. We
need to make it easier and cheaper for the job creators in this country
to create private sector jobs, but yet the President's health care law
makes it harder and more expensive. Tomorrow night, the President needs
to change direction. Instead of giving waivers to businesses and
unions, he should announce that all Americans can get a waiver from his
health care law.
The good news is, I have a bill he can support immediately. My bill
will allow any individual--any American citizen--to submit a waiver
application seeking relief from any or all of the health care law's
mandates. The waivers will be granted to individuals showing that the
health care law is either increasing their health care premiums or
decreasing their access to benefits. The bill is simple. It is
straightforward. It is S. 1395. It is called the Waive Act, and there
are 16 cosponsors in the Senate. Basically, it says, if a person's
costs go up or their benefits go down, they have the freedom to get out
of the President's health care law. Health insurance premiums have
risen 19 percent since President Obama took office.
Tomorrow night, the President should announce that he will allow all
Americans an opportunity to opt out of his health care law. If he did,
this would be one of the best steps he could take to help America's
economy. That is why I come to the floor, week after week, with a
doctor's second opinion about a health care law that I believe is
hurting our country.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SESSIONS. 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.
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