[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 108 (Thursday, July 25, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5931-S5932]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OBAMACARE
Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, this week, the President of the United
States, President Obama, has made yet another pivot back to the economy
and to jobs, issues the American people have not had the luxury of
pivoting away from.
While the President is yet again attempting to refocus on jobs and
the economy, giving speeches is not a real solution to our Nations
problems. In fact, yesterday President Obama said in his speech that
Washington is taking its eye off the ball. Mr. President, you are
Washington. You have been President now for 4\1/2\ years. These are
your policies, policies that are hurting our economy and costing
Americans jobs.
As for taking your eye off the ball, the President appears to be
swinging with his eyes closed, with his eyes closed to the impact that
his policies are having on the economy in this country. We do not have
to look very far to see the impact of those policies. The ObamaCare
legislation is having a crushing impact on jobs in this country--a
crushing impact on the economy.
As we look at the unemployment rate, it is still over 7\1/2\ percent.
It has been there now for 54 months. That is the worst job record of
any President since the Great Depression.
The President's signature law, ObamaCare, continues to hamstring the
job market. In June alone, the last month for which we have data,
322,000 Americans were forced into part-time employment status. Those
are people who otherwise would have been willing to work full-time but
because of these policies that are encouraging more employers to push
their employees into part-time status, we have 322,000 individuals in
this country who want to work full-time that are now having to work
part-time.
ObamaCare and other policies put forward by this administration have
been probably the best thing that has happened to part-time jobs.
Unfortunately, for most Americans, they want to be working full-time. A
recent chamber of commerce survey shows that nearly 75 percent of small
businesses are firing workers or cutting hours. As implementation of
the ObamaCare law continues, the number of small business owners who
take those steps, unfortunately, is only going to increase.
According to a recent Wall Street Journal article:
Rod Carstensen, owner of 11 Del Taco restaurants around
Denver began in April converting his mostly full-time
workforce into one comprising mostly part-time help to
minimize his health care costs. . . . He is plowing ahead
despite the ObamaCare administration's reprieve, he said,
because we need to get there anyway, and it will take until
January 1 of 2015 to make this transition.
He is referring, of course, to the employer mandate which the
President has chosen to delay for this next year when it was supposed
to take effect, until January 1 of 2015. Most employers, unfortunately,
are not taking great consolation in the fact that this is being delayed
by 1 year. They know at some point they are going to have to comply
with it.
So they are taking those steps already, which is adding and fueling
the data--the numbers I just mentioned with regard to people being
forced into part-time jobs. Americans are facing decreased hours which
means decreased wages. Additionally, families are facing higher
insurance premiums, which further erodes their disposable income and
opportunities to invest in a new home or a better education for their
children.
A growing number of Americans are realizing ObamaCare is the wrong
prescription for families who are at the mercy of an already struggling
economy. The administration has been forced to concede that the
employer mandate, which is a key component of the ObamaCare
legislation, is broken and unworkable, which is why they have delayed
it.
We are starting to see Democrats, who have historically been
supportive of the law, suddenly jumping from the ObamaCare sinking
ship. On Monday, a headline in the Washington Post read, ``Moderate
Democrats are quitting on ObamaCare.''
The article disclosed that fewer than 50 percent of moderate to
conservative Democrats now support ObamaCare, which is down more than
25 percentage points since 2010 when it passed. Congressional Democrats
are also becoming increasingly skittish about ObamaCare. The House vote
last Wednesday on the employer mandate delay passed 264 to 161--35
Democrats joined 229 Republicans in support for that bill.
Additionally, there were 22 House Democrats who voted to delay the
law's individual mandate. Even a Democratic Senator has introduced
legislation for a 2-year--not a 1-year but a 2-year employer mandate
delay. In a recent letter to the Democratic leadership, three large
unions expressed grave concerns with the law, led by the Teamsters
Union, the organization that Jimmy Hoffa leads.
Once some of the biggest supporters of ObamaCare penned a letter--
three major unions penned a letter basically saying that the health
care law will ``shatter'' health benefits and cause ``nightmare
scenarios.'' Shatter health benefits, create nightmare scenarios, that
is what the unions are saying. The unions also slammed the law for
defining a full-time employee as one who works less than 30 hours.
The unions went on to say in their letter that the law ``will destroy
the foundation of the 40 hour work week that is the backbone of the
middle class.''
It is very clear that even those who were vocal, those who vigorously
defended and supported the ObamaCare
[[Page S5932]]
legislation, recognize this is not working and are making it abundantly
clear in the statements that they are now making.
Just yesterday, as I mentioned, the President delivered a speech
aiming to yet again pivot, as he says, back to jobs and the economy. He
used the speech to kick off another campaign-style tour of speeches in
hopes that touting his continued commitment to an economic recovery
will overshadow these harsh realities of ObamaCare and other economic
woes that plague this country.
During yesterday's speech, the President claimed he is dedicated to
the middle class and growing the economy from ``the middle out.'' What
do these concerns tell us about the state of the middle class? Hard-
working Americans are now fearful about their job security, about their
health care coverage, and their ability to make ends meet all because
of this catastrophic law.
The President's strongest political allies who represent millions of
workers say the President's signature domestic achievement is
``destroying the backbone of the middle class.'' Although the President
continues to pivot to and away from these issues, Senate Republicans
remain focused on creating jobs and growth in this country. It is time
for a real recovery. The American people are ready to get back to work.
For 54 months, we have seen unemployment at or above 7\1/2\ percent.
That number does not reflect the people who have given up looking for
work. Let's remove the heavy hand of Washington regulations from our
job creators. Let's create certainty for employers so they might hire
new employees, not cut the hours of those they already have.
Let's spare the middle class from premium increases. I have seen
studies all over the place that suggest, for families, for individuals,
premiums across this country are going up. According to Kaiser, for
families, it is $2,500. In order to achieve the goals of addressing
these issues in our economy, we have to start with a permanent delay of
ObamaCare for all Americans--not just for the employers, not just the
employer mandate but the individual mandates, the other regulations
that are 20,000 pages high--7\1/2\ feet tall are the regulations that
have been promulgated to implement this law. It continues to grow by
the week.
We did not need a 2,700-page bill. We did not need 20,000 pages of
regulations to address the problems we have in our health care delivery
system and health care coverage system today. But that is what we got.
But the President's job-killing tactics do not stop just at health
care. The President's proposed climate change regulations alone would
cost 500,000 jobs and reduce household income by up to $1,000 per year.
Dodd-Frank has already cost $15.4 billion and 58.3 million hours in
paperwork burdens on businesses across the country. Rather than more
campaign-style speeches touting the same old flawed ideas, the
President should work with Congress to put more Americans back to work.
By working together, we can enact meaningful regulatory reform that
will provide relief to employers and to employees alike. We can fix our
health care system in a manner that lowers costs while allowing
families to keep the doctors they want. We can enact tax reform that
will create economic growth, lower the unemployment rate, and reduce
our unsustainable budget deficit.
We can expand access to domestic energy resources in a manner that
fully realizes the benefits of increased energy production. This
cooperation must start with President Obama getting off the campaign
trail and getting to work with Congress on these important issues. So
instead of pivoting yet again to the economy, in campaign-style
speeches, we need a President that is here, that is working to address
the economic woes American families are experiencing.
If you want to start by going out and touting things that you are
going to do for the economy, start right away by approving the Keystone
Pipeline. That is a no-brainer, in most people's estimation. In fact,
the President's own administration has analyzed and reviewed and
scrutinized and studied this thing now four different times and
concluded it would have not an impact on the climate.
It would create immediate jobs, thousands of jobs, construction jobs,
and then jobs over a long period of time. It would help lessen the
dependence we have on foreign sources of energy by freeing up
transportation of energy resources that come from friendly allies in
countries such as Canada to get to American consumers in this country.
There are things the President could be doing that actually will
create jobs. Come up here and engage in the debate on tax reform.
Commit to tax reform that is revenue neutral, that does not raise taxes
on people who create jobs in this country but, rather, lowers the rate
to unleash economic growth and job creation in this country. Work with
us to repeal, permanently delay, the ObamaCare regulations that are
crushing jobs and the economy and, as I pointed out earlier, are
forcing more and more Americans into part-time jobs, forcing employers
to either cut and reduce their workforce or not hire people they
otherwise might hire, and raising premiums for hard-working middle-
class families.
Mr. President, it is not Washington that does not have its eye on the
ball, it is you who does not have your eye on the ball.
We need you to focus like a laser on the economy and recognize that
you can't close your eyes to the harmful, economic impact that your
policies are having on too many middle-class Americans and small
businesses who create jobs in this country to generate the economic
growth that is necessary to improve the standard of living and the
take-home pay of every American family. This is what we need.
I hope the President will get off the campaign trail, come back, and
focus on what really matters to middle-class Americans; that is, jobs,
the economy, and a better life for their children and grandchildren.
I yield the floor.
Mrs. MURRAY. I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk called the roll.
Mrs. MURRAY. 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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