[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 131 (Saturday, September 28, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H5931-H5932]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
52 PERCENT OF AMERICANS OPPOSE OBAMACARE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Thompson) for 5 minutes.
[[Page H5932]]
Mr. THOMPSON of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, the President, in his
remarks to the country yesterday, demonstrated a willingness for
diplomacy and negotiations. Sadly, any leadership he reflected in his
remarks was a willingness to communicate and negotiate with the terror-
states of Iran and Syria and not the United States House of
Representatives. What the President also made clear was his
unwillingness to serve the will and the concerns of a majority of
American citizens, families, and businesses when it comes to their
health care.
Health care is one of the more intimate issues in America. There
should be no surprise of the emotional reaction and rejection by the
majority of the country when this legislation is passed unilaterally by
one party without adequate debate or vetting and is mandated on 311
Americans.
The September 4 to 23 Real Clear Politics compilation of seven major
national polls show that an average of 52 percent of Americans are
opposed or against the Affordable Care Act, while only 38.7 percent are
for or in favor of this law.
Mr. Speaker, I understand the political divide that unfortunately
exists in Washington, but what I do not get is how the President
ignores the will of the majority of the American people. We expect
leadership from the President, but there is no leadership when the
direction you want to take the country is rejected as the wrong
direction for the majority of American citizens.
Now, some have said that the Affordable Care Act is the law, so just
implement it. Well, that makes a dangerous assumption that Congress
never gets it wrong. History has certainly shown precedence that
Congress can and has corrected the mistakes that it has made. The
Prohibition, which was repealed in 1933, had been fairly unpopular--
probably more disliked than even ObamaCare. More recently, the Medicare
Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988, a bipartisan bill, was intended to
provide supplemental health care insurance for the elderly. But it also
included a surtax on middle- and upper-income seniors which was quickly
repealed when the will of a majority of Americans was taken into
consideration.
Now, what is more dangerous than a government that may err on
occasion or supposed leaders that are incapable of recognizing an error
and taking a course of correction?
{time} 1100
Mr. Speaker, the Senate Democrats yesterday recklessly voted to
disregard the will of the American majority and essentially endorse a
government shutdown rather than take any course of correction on what
is a fundamentally flawed law that is raising premiums and already
limiting access.
In my home State of Pennsylvania, countless children in disadvantaged
homes are covered under the Children's Health Insurance Program, or
CHIP. The CHIP program originated in Pennsylvania and provides support
to parents of these children to allow them to buy health insurance for
their children from the commercial insurance market. The CHIP program
provides access to quality health care, not with government-run
programs, but through a partnership with the private sector. Under
ObamaCare, these children are being ripped out of CHIP and placed in
medical assistance where the parents will be hard-pressed to find a
pediatrician even willing to see, let alone treat, their child.
Mr. Speaker, the unwillingness to admit the errors of ObamaCare and
take corrective action is even throwing America's most vulnerable
children, who are growing up in poverty circumstances, under the bus.
They deserve better.
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