[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 160 (Wednesday, December 12, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7789-S7790]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTH CARE TAX HIKES
Mr. BARRASSO. Madam President, I rise today to talk about the tax
hikes that are going to be hitting middle-class families all across
this country, and it is going to do so in a way that many Americans do
not realize. Everyone in Washington is talking about the fiscal cliff
and the tax increases that might come from that, but today I wish to
talk about something different; that is, the tax increases that are
coming regardless of what happens with the fiscal cliff. Those are the
tax hikes we are seeing because of President Obama's health care law.
People who have been following this closely know that President
Obama's health care law guarantees that middle-class families will pay
higher taxes. The President promised repeatedly that he would not raise
taxes on the middle class. As a matter of fact, he said, ``If you're a
family making less than $250,000 a year,'' referring to his health care
plan, ``my plan won't raise your taxes one penny--not your income
taxes, not your payroll taxes, not your capital gains taxes, not any of
your taxes.'' That is what the President said. But once he got into
office, President Obama arranged for his health care plan to be written
behind closed doors. Democrats in Congress passed it, and they did it
strictly along party lines.
This law included more than 20 different tax increases. These tax
increases amount to more than $1 trillion over the next 10 years. Of
those, a dozen taxes specifically targeted middle-class taxpayers. The
most famous, of course, is the individual mandate tax. That is the one
which requires that all Americans buy a government-approved health
insurance plan. If they don't for even 1 single month out of the year,
then they have to pay the tax. Members of the Senate ought to remember
this one. This is the one the American public still finds very
unfavorable, to the point that still a majority of Americans want to
change or either completely eliminate and repeal the President's health
care law.
The law continues to be very unpopular. One of the main reasons has
to do with this tax. It is a tax that is going to hit families harder
than single people, and it is going to hit the middle class harder than
wealthier Americans. You know what. That is the way it was designed,
amazingly. That is the way the Democrats in this body designed the
tax--to hit the middle class harder than wealthier Americans. By 2016,
4.7 million low- and middle-income households will face a tax for not
buying government-approved health insurance. It was entirely
predictable. In fact, a lot of us on the Republican side of the aisle
did predict it right here on the floor of the Senate.
Well, this leads me to another aspect of the health care law that the
White House and the Democrats have not been eager to talk about, and it
is the role specifically related to this tax, and that is the role of
the IRS, the Internal Revenue Service. The law gives the IRS
unprecedented new powers to do what? To probe into taxpayers' lives.
Right after the election--and they waited until after the election--
the Obama administration started releasing a wave of new health care
regulations. These include new rules on how the IRS plans to implement
the new health care taxes. Just last week, they put out proposed rules
on how they are going to enforce the new Medicare payroll taxes. They
still haven't said exactly how they plan to enforce the individual
mandate tax.
But we do know IRS agents are going to be verifying who bought health
insurance and taxing everyone who didn't. We know the IRS will be doing
more tax audits for health care spending. We know the IRS will be able
to confiscate Americans' tax refunds. Why? Well, to pay for health care
taxes--not to pay for health care but to pay for health care taxes and
to assess interest and late fees on people without insurance.
We know we are going to see an army of new IRS agents and auditors--
to do what? They are going to investigate the health insurance choices
of Americans and their families. The agency is going to have to collect
a huge amount of data not just from insurance companies but from the
American people. The IRS is going to want to know details such as the
cost and the benefit structure of every person's health insurance
policy. They are going to want to know who in each household is covered
and how long they have been covered. They will want to know the incomes
people reported to their insurance company and what other kind of
coverage their employer may have offered.
To get all of this information, the Internal Revenue Service will
have to develop new layers, additional layers of redtape for businesses
and for families, new forms, new filing procedures, and new
instructions. It is going to have to come up with some way for
taxpayers to resolve any discrepancies, and there are going to be a lot
between what their tax returns say and the data the insurance companies
report. It is going to be a nightmare. It is not clear how the IRS is
going to do this, but people are certainly going to need to keep very
careful records. It is also clear that a lot of Americans are going to
be defending themselves against audits.
All of that is work the IRS is going to have to do just to get ready
for this massive amount of new bureaucracy. The problem is that several
independent reviews have found that the agency is seriously unprepared.
In one, the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration found
that the IRS is not equipped--not equipped--to implement the law
contained in what is called the ``largest set of tax law changes in
more than 20 years.'' The IRS hasn't even conducted a thorough review
of the law that it is required to execute. As a result, the Inspector
General's Office said it wasn't able to determine whether the IRS had
adequately planned for the workforce it will need.
There was a separate analysis done. There was an analysis done by the
House of Representatives. They found that the IRS could need more than
16,000 new IRS agents, new IRS examiners, new IRS support employees.
Well, you know as well as I that the American taxpayers will get hit
with the bill to pay for the salaries of all of those new IRS
employees--the agents, the examiners, and the support employees.
The American people knew what they wanted from health care reform.
What they asked for was the care they need from the doctor they choose
at a lower cost. That is what the President and Democrats promised
them. It turns out that what the American public has gotten is fewer
choices, more regulations, and higher taxes.
In meeting after meeting, when visiting with constituents in Wyoming,
I said, ``How many of you believe that under the President's health
care law, you are going to pay more for your health insurance?'' All of
the hands went up.
I said, ``How many of you think that the quality and availability of
your care because of the President's health
[[Page S7790]]
care law is going to go down or it is going to get worse?'' Again, all
of the hands went up.
Now what these same people are learning is that the IRS is the chief
Federal enforcer for key parts of President Obama's health care law.
The people of my State and the people around the country do not like it
at all.
What we are going to have as a result of the health care law is a
much larger Internal Revenue Service. They are going to have broad new
powers--powers to investigate, powers to monitor, and powers to tax the
American people. At the same time, there is real doubt about whether
the agency is even up to the job.
America's middle-class families don't want, don't need, and cannot
afford more taxes. They don't want, they don't need, and they cannot
afford a more powerful Internal Revenue Service, with more agents
looking into the details of their health care choices, but that is
exactly what President Obama and every Democrat in this body have given
to the American people.
Mr. President, I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a
quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Whitehouse). The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. COONS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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