[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 25 (Tuesday, February 11, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H1722-H1723]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Mr. Speaker, all things are subject to interpretation,
but as Nietzsche once said:
Whichever interpretation prevails at a given time is often
more a function of power and not truth.
Last week, the Congressional Budget Office came out with a report
evaluating the economic impacts of the Affordable Care Act. Since then,
there are those who have used the power they have to frame a false
narrative. Rather than talking about what the report actually says,
they have spent the last week talking about what they would like it to
say. Their false interpretation of the ObamaCare act is that it will
cost the American economy 2.5 million jobs; but the truth is that the
much-misrepresented CBO study didn't say that at all because, as The
Wall Street Journal accurately reported, reducing the total number of
hours Americans have to work is very different than eliminating jobs.
One of the reasons we passed the Affordable Care Act in the first
place was to fix the pitfalls of this country's employer-based health
care system. Before the ACA, people with preexisting conditions were
often forced to stay in their jobs to avoid losing their health care
coverage. Even if they wanted to leave their jobs to reduce their
hours, retire early, change careers, or to spend more time with their
families, they couldn't because doing so would risk their ability to
provide affordable health insurance for their families.
{time} 1015
What the Affordable Care Act did was right this wrong. By broadening
access to health insurance, the ACA has increased personal freedom and
market choice. Now Americans can choose jobs based on what they want to
be doing instead of staying where they are unhappy just to keep their
insurance.
The expansion of Medicaid eligibility and the subsidies available in
the exchanges will give Americans the flexibility they need to raise
their families, not encourage workers to seek less employment, which
was one of the most misleading claims made after the report was
released.
The idea that hardworking Americans will modify their employment just
to be eligible for social safety net programs is both ludicrous and
offensive. Nobody wants to live in a situation that makes you eligible
for Medicaid or other social safety net programs, but too many
hardworking Americans are forced to.
In Illinois, a family of four must exist on less than $32,500 per
year to qualify for these programs. In the Chicago area, the cost of
living is high and families struggle to make ends meet.
Measures like Medicaid and SNAP are meant to help people lift
themselves from poverty. Claiming that poor people want to be poor to
rely more on the government is misguided and just flat out wrong.
I have said from the beginning that the ACA is far from perfect and
that we should work together to improve it, but arguing that at-risk
and low-income Americans will actively choose to work less, reducing
their own incomes and jeopardizing their family's economic future just
to ``game the system,'' is not a legitimate issue and speaks volumes
about the extreme views that are dividing our government and preventing
real reform from occurring.
By focusing on false interpretations, we are forgetting the economic
benefits contained in the law. To quote the CBO report:
If some people seek to work less, other applicants will be
readily available to fill those positions and the overall
effect on employment will be muted.
At a time when long-term employment is at its highest since World War
II, there are more than enough workers willing and able to take these
jobs. That is why the director of the CBO recently testified about the
likelihood of the ACA creating jobs, not eliminating them.
The report also acknowledged that insurance premiums under the law
are 15 percent lower than originally forecast, that ``the slowdown in
Medicare cost growth'' is ``broad and persistent,''
[[Page H1723]]
and that enrollments will increase over time to where they would have
been if not for the Web site's issues.
Mr. Speaker, thanks to the Affordable Care Act, millions of Americans
can now access affordable health insurance. With a focus on personal
responsibility, preventive care, consumer protections, and increased
choices, the Affordable Care Act has helped empower Americans to lead
healthier lives.
Let's put aside the punditry and focus on the facts.
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