[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 98 (Wednesday, June 27, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H4070-H4071]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Butterfield) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BUTTERFIELD. Mr. Speaker, the centerpiece of President Obama's
2008 Presidential campaign was the promise of health care reform. He
told us, time and time again, that every President has seen the urgency
of reform, that all of them had attempted reform, and none succeeded.
[[Page H4071]]
President Obama reminded us of the fact that having more than 40
million uninsured Americans is unacceptable. It is not only bad for the
individual, but it is for the American economy. It is bad for hospitals
who absorb the loss for these indigent patients or shift the costs to
other patients.
During the campaign, the President went on to painfully highlight the
unfair practices of some insurance companies in making people think
they have quality insurance policies, when, in fact, in many instances,
it is not worth the paper it is written on.
After fierce debate, and after the right-wing Tea Party instilled
unfounded fear in the hearts of good Americans, the Congress passed the
Affordable Care Act, and it is good policy for the American people. But
there are those who have exploited the legitimacy of the Affordable
Care Act, and now we await a ruling from the Supreme Court on the act's
constitutionality.
Should the Supreme Court decide to undermine the most vital provision
of the law, the individual mandate, one thing will be clear: it would
be an act of judicial activism and judicial overreach, placing the
Court firmly in the role of Congress.
Precedent for the Affordable Care Act already exists. Social Security
is a program which all Americans are required to pay into and to
participate. Car insurance is mandated in almost every State; yet the
Supreme Court is on precipice of possible unfastening the linchpin that
makes true health care reform attainable.
Such a decision would confiscate benefits that the public and
businesses largely support. Lifetime coverage limits could be re-
imposed on 100 million Americans. Seventeen million children with
preexisting conditions could lose insurance coverage, and 6 million
young adults may be forced off their parents' insurance plans.
Preservation of this law means 40 million uninsured Americans will be
insured. It creates state-run health exchanges to give consumers
maximum choice when selecting a policy, and it contains skyrocketing
costs in medical care. The Affordable Care Act will lower insurance
premiums driven by uncompensated care for the uninsured, saving the
average family in North Carolina $1,400 a year.
Mr. Speaker, the Affordable Care Act has already paid great dividends
in my district. Under the law, 94,000 seniors have received Medicare
preventive services without paying a dime. More than 5,000 young adults
have health insurance when they previously did not. About 400 small
businesses received tax credits to expand care to their employees;
34,000 children with preexisting health conditions can no longer be
denied.
As a policy-maker representing 700,000 people, I hope the act will
remain intact. As a former judge, I hope the Supreme Court recognizes
the impact an unfavorable decision will have on the role of Congress.
We cannot let the perfect, Mr. Speaker, be the enemy of the good. We
should explore ways to improve upon the law instead of ways to further
deny Americans access to affordable health care.
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