[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 97 (Tuesday, July 9, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H4219-H4220]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FAILURES OF OBAMACARE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Thompson) for 5 minutes.
Mr. THOMPSON of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, last week while the
American people were preparing to celebrate the 237th birthday of the
Nation, the Obama administration announced, via a blog post, that it
will provide an additional year before the employer reporting
requirements and the employer shared responsibility requirements of
ObamaCare take effect.
There are few issues as personal and significant in the lives of
individuals and families as health and well-being, which is why the
irony of reminding Americans that government now controls their health
care during the week we celebrate our country's independence did not go
unnoticed. Despite efforts to quietly buy time and obfuscate
responsibility for this fatally designed health care law, most
Americans rightfully view this delay as an admission of failure.
Mr. Speaker, the businesses that provide the jobs and the source of
health care coverage for most Americans were not surprised by this
announcement. Most are well aware that this law was thoughtlessly
rammed through Congress in the middle of the night with a litany of
technology flaws and other blatant failures.
Unfortunately, employers have been struggling with high health care
costs since before the law passed. Given the combined pressure of new
taxes and regulations, businesses are hurting exponentially worse now
that the law's provisions have begun to take effect. These new
government mandates incentivize businesses to reduce their workforce to
under 50 full-time equivalency employees. To avoid financial penalties,
the incentive under ObamaCare is to reduce individual hours to avoid
these mandates. Employees now face the redefinition of ``full-time''
down to just 35 hours per week.
This law denies opportunities for growth that could and should be
available and promoted. This is fundamentally counter to what a vibrant
and robust American economy demands. Fewer jobs and reduced individual
hours are not good for individuals, for families, for businesses, or
for our economy. Nonetheless, employees and employers alike are
experiencing the consequences of ``Obama-sizing'' both businesses and
jobs.
By the time the law is fully implemented in 2023, the Congressional
[[Page H4220]]
Budget Office estimates that the President's health care law will still
leave 30 million Americans uninsured. At the same time, the law is
massively driving up the cost of care for both employers and employees.
In fact, 17 of the Nation's largest insurance companies indicate that
health insurance premiums will grow an average of 100 percent under
this law.
The evidence is overwhelmingly conclusive, Mr. Speaker: ObamaCare is
not only unaffordable, but it also fails to address access to care in
any meaningful way. In the process, we're damaging everything that is
good and effective about the current system. To boot, we're undermining
growth and stalling our economic recovery. Effectively, we've thrown
the baby out with the bathwater. The fact that the White House used a
blog post to announce the employer mandate change reveals just how
desperate the administration is to cover up the flaws of this fatally
flawed bill. Unfortunately, this is not something the White House was
willing to admit until after the midterm election.
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