[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 52 (Thursday, March 29, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2222-S2223]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTH CARE
Mr. CHAMBLISS. The political world this week has been focused on the
U.S. Supreme Court and the arguments that have taken place over there
with respect to what has been referred to as ObamaCare.
I rise today to discuss how the 2-year-old health care law is forcing
more government intrusion into the lives of Americans.
After all, what could be more intrusive than the Federal Government
telling you the type of health care coverage you must purchase?
``Purchase this product or face a penalty.''
With this law, I believe the American people have recognized that
Congress has exceeded its constitutional authority. Just this week, a
poll conducted by The Hill found that 49 percent of likely voters
believe that the Supreme Court will rule against the constitutionality
of the health care law, while only 29 percent believe it will be
upheld. The American people have to ask themselves whether we should be
able to punish citizens based whether they purchase a product from the
private sector.
The Commerce Clause only allows the Federal Government to regulate
``existing activity'' that affects interstate commerce. I hope this
distinction will be recognized by our justices on the Supreme Court.
With no end in sight to escalating health care costs, Republicans want
to see innovation within the private sector to bring about changes to
our health care system. Today, Medicare and Medicaid are running up our
national debt and bankrupting our states. One would think less
government involvement, not more, would help bring health care costs
under control. Instead, the health care law builds on this
administration's desire to have the Federal Government control
Americans' health care decisions. To this end, the Obama administration
has created 159 new boards, bureaucracies and programs under ObamaCare.
As of this month, the administration has released more than 12,000
pages of regulations related to the law. The secretary of Health and
Human Services will have the power to make more than 1,700 rulings
affecting Americans and the health care they seek. Time and time again,
my colleagues and I have warned that adding more red tape and
bureaucratic oversight that will affect the relationship between you
and your doctor is not the prescription Americans are looking for.
We want to protect the relationship between the patient and
physician. Consultation between the patient and the physician should be
the determining factor in what procedures that patient chooses, not
someone who sits on a panel in Washington, DC.
However, this may well be the case as the health care law
concentrates power in the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. This is
the same task force that in November 2009 recommended that women
between the ages of 40 and 49 no longer obtain annual mammograms. These
are the types of recommendations that Washington bureaucrats could make
in the future. I especially understand the importance of early
detection of cancer, having been there myself, and will fight to see
that individuals, through the recommendations of their doctors, are in
charge of determining their own health care procedures.
Throughout the debate 2 years ago we constantly heard from folks on
the other side of the aisle that if you liked your health care
coverage, you could keep it. Well, guess what. According to the latest
CBO estimates, you can ask 5 million people who will see their
employer-sponsored health care end in 2016 whether they had the
opportunity to keep what they like.
Further, the incentives for employers to drop their coverage and move
employees onto a taxpayer-subsidized plan means we could see up to 35
million Americans lose their current coverage over the first 10 years
of implementation of this law.
Washington is now in the business of reducing the flexibility of
consumer-driven health care policies such as health savings accounts
and flexible spending arrangements. Congress created health savings
accounts to allow health care consumers who wish to participate in the
program more control over their own money and how they choose to spend
that money for health care services. Now contributions to these
arrangements will be limited to $2,500 per year, and over-the-counter
medications will require a prescription if they are purchased within
these tax-free dollars. This is already leading to doctors having to
fill out more paperwork so an individual can walk into a drugstore to
purchase aspirin or cold medicine. Yet again this is another glaring
example of bureaucratic meddling in the lives of American consumers.
Small businesses are also feeling the intrusive effects of ObamaCare.
In the most recent survey of small businesses by the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, an astounding 74 percent of small business owners surveyed
said the health care law makes it harder for businesses to hire more
employees. Think about that for a moment. Three out of four small
business owners are having difficulty hiring because of the uncertainty
of health care costs.
Finally, our States are also feeling the heavy hand of more
government control. The Medicaid expansion that begins in 2014 will
make it increasingly difficult for State leaders to balance their
budgets due to strict maintenance of effort requirements. These
requirements prevent States from designing health care programs
specifically tailored for their own citizens.
Medicaid currently consumes about one-quarter of State budgets and
ObamaCare creates the largest expansion of the program since its
inception.
[[Page S2223]]
Through 2023, the cost to States is now estimated to be an additional
$118 billion. In my home State of Georgia, the expansion will cost the
State about $2.5 billion through 2020. Money in the budget to pay for
this expansion will come at the expense of higher education,
transportation, and law enforcement services. Nationally 24.7 million
people who will be added to the Medicaid rolls will be entering a
broken system where patients are denied access to about 40 percent of
the physicians because reimbursement rates do not keep up with medical
costs.
Two years ago the legislative process that unfolded before us was not
something any Senator should be proud of today. Backroom deal making
and forcing legislation through under a subversive process left the
American people angry and upset with Congress. If we don't understand
that, just look at the approval rating of Congress today, and this
played a major role in that approval rating.
I hope in the future we will have an opportunity to revisit the
system. Our system does need reforming, but it needs to be done in the
right way and it needs to be done in a very transparent way. I hope we
can come up with a solution that is actually supported by the American
public, not solutions that make the American public angry.
I yield the floor.
Mr. WICKER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as if in
morning business.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
____________________