[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 10 (Tuesday, January 17, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S326-S328]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OBAMACARE REPLACEMENT PLAN
Mr. CASSIDY. Mr. President, I was pleased to see on the front page of
the Washington Post that President-Elect Trump was speaking about how
we should maintain at least the number of people covered under
ObamaCare in a new kind of replacement for that portion of ObamaCare.
If you will, I agree totally with him. We should fulfill this promise
and do it, as he said, at a lower cost.
We think we have a mechanism to do so with Senator Collins. We will
speak to that today. First, let me point out, for those who are
praising ObamaCare, I will say that since it has passed, the American
people have been voting consistently against candidates who supported
ObamaCare, culminating in the election of President-Elect Trump. So
whatever folks might say about how wonderful it is, the American people
are voting against it consistently.
That said, there is a mandate from the American people not just to
repeal but to replace. So it is not that the American people don't want
to have coverage, and they want folks with preexisting conditions to
have their issues addressed, but what they are concerned about is the
way ObamaCare was forced upon them, with the power of Washington, DC,
reaching into their own life, if you will, to their kitchen table,
promising them penalties unless they comply with the Washington
bureaucrats directly. That is what the American people do not like.
So, first, can we maintain coverage? President-Elect Trump said we
are going to have insurance for everybody. Two, will we cover more?
Yes. Three, can we lower costs? The answer there is yes.
Now, let's first speak to covering more Americans than ObamaCare.
President-Elect Trump, Majority Leader McConnell, and Speaker Ryan have
all committed to maintaining coverage for all.
People speak of the advances made under ObamaCare. I will give them
those advances. There are still 30 million people uninsured. Our
alternative has the potential to cover 95 percent of Americans without
a mandate. The way we do this is that as we return power to the States,
we give States the option of saying that everyone who is eligible for
coverage is enrolled unless they choose not to be.
Just like when I turned 65 and I am on Medicare. I am on Medicare. I
don't feel it is a mandate. No one calls me up. Indeed, if I don't want
to be on Medicare, I have to call someone up and tell them I don't want
to be on it. State legislatures would have the option to say you are in
unless you call and tell us you are out. I say that addresses two folks
who are hard to reach; the fellow whose life is so in disarray that he
is living beneath a park bench and the typical 28-year-old male who
never thinks about health insurance. All of a sudden he is in without
even realizing he is in, until he needs it, and then he will be very
pleased.
On the other hand, if you don't want to be in, we make it easy to get
out. By the way, I spoke of that fellow living beneath the park bench.
As a physician who has worked in a hospital for the uninsured for 30
years, that was not tongue-in-cheek, and that is not a throwaway line.
That person living beneath the park bench will never have his life well
enough together, or almost never, to go to a public library to log onto
healthcare.gov. He does not have a W-2--and if he did, he lost it long
ago--to submit it to sign up.
Under our program, he is enrolled. What are the benefits that he
would get? He would have a health savings account so that if he goes to
the urgent care center with a nail in his foot, it is covered. He has a
pharmacy benefit, so that if he gets his life together while he is at
that urgent care center to take an antipsychotic, he has a pharmacy
benefit. Lastly, if something terrible happens, he is hit by a car or
something, then he is brought to the hospital and that catastrophic
coverage protects society against the cost of his hospitalization.
By the way, under our plan, we give States the power. I would like to
think that this is something Democrats and Republicans can agree to.
When Republicans say: You can keep your plan if you like it, and we
mean it, we mean it. The way we would do this is that Congress would
give States alternative options. The State would have the choice.
The State could go with the alternative, which we will lay out. The
State could opt for nothing, no Medicaid expansion and no help for
their lower income folks, or the State could opt to stay in ObamaCare.
If Illinois, California, Massachusetts, New York want to stay in
ObamaCare, we think they should have the right to stay in ObamaCare.
ObamaCare, if it is working for your State, God bless you. On the
other hand, it is not working for a State where there are double-digit
and sometimes triple-digit premium increases in 1 year.
So the State could choose to stay in ObamaCare, for nothing, or for
the alternative, which we lay out for them. By the way, I would say
that those who govern closest to those who are governed govern best. We
know that the State of Alaska is far different than the State of
California, Illinois, Louisiana, or New York. So let those States
decide the system that works best for them.
What is the timeline? This year, 2017, we would like to repeal
ObamaCare but put in place the legislation which allows, in 2018, for a
State legislature or a Governor to choose the option they wish and the
method by which they wish to enroll the people of their State. In 2019,
the State would implement the replacement option of their choice. By
2020, the repeal and the replace would have been finished.
If, at a later date, a State wishes to change their option--they
decided to stay with ObamaCare but on second thought now they wish to
have the alternative we lay out, which I actually think would be
something that might happen, they could choose that as a later option.
We are not being partisan. I tell folks, this is not a Republican
plan, not
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a Democratic plan, it is a patient plan, born out of my experience
working in a public hospital for the uninsured; that if you give the
patient the power, things line up. If we can make it an American
patient plan, it does not matter what your State decides. I am
comfortable that we will end up in the right place.
Our goal is to fulfill President-Elect Trump's promise, more coverage
at lower cost. We think we have laid out a pathway which can truly be
bipartisan to achieve that goal.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maine.
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, first, let me start by commending the
Senator from Louisiana for all of the thought and the work he has put
into coming up with an alternative plan that would fix ObamaCare and
result in more Americans having affordable health insurance. As a
physician, Senator Cassidy cares deeply about his patients and about
patients in general. His goal, which I share, is to make sure every
American has access to affordable health care. I commend him for his
hard work and leadership.
There has been much debate lately on the best approach to replacing
and reforming the Affordable Care Act, also known as ObamaCare. Some of
my colleagues have argued for immediate repeal without any replacement,
an option I reject, for it risks leaving millions of vulnerable
Americans without affordable health insurance and would undo important
consumer protections provided by current law.
Others have proposed repeal with a delayed effective date of 2 or 3
years to allow time for the Senate to devise legislation that would
provide a better approach to health insurance. My concern with the
repeal-and-delay plan is that the ObamaCare exchanges, already on very
shaky financial ground, would go into a death spiral as consumers would
face uncertainty and insurers would have no basis for pricing their
policies.
Already we have seen insurers fleeing the marketplaces in many
States, reducing choices for consumers. In some States, only one or two
insurers remain on the exchanges, leaving individuals and families with
few, if any, choice of insurance carriers. Every single one of the 23
State cooperatives whose startup costs were financed by ObamaCare has
experienced severe financial problems and only five remain operational
today.
Many States, including Maine, are experiencing double-digit increases
in premiums, causing increased costs for consumers and for taxpayers.
So repeal and delay would only exacerbate this problem.
I am pleased to see a growing consensus among Members of both the
Senate and the House that we must fix ObamaCare, provide reforms at
nearly the same time that we repeal the law, in order to protect
families who rely on the program and to give insurers time to
transition to a new marketplace that is based on more choices for
consumers.
Many of us have been working for years on proposals to reform our
health care system, to expand coverage, and to encourage new delivery
systems that would help restrain the growth in health care costs. That
is what the legislation that I am going to be pleased to be joining my
colleague from Louisiana on, would do. It is focused on giving more
choices while ensuring that consumers have access to affordable health
insurance.
We have advanced bipartisan proposals in the past to deal with
provisions of the law that have increased costs and discouraged
employers from hiring full-time workers. Regrettably, every such reform
has been met with a veto threat. That is why we continued to work.
In 2015, I joined Senator Cassidy in introducing a more comprehensive
and creative approach, the Patient Freedom Act, which is the basis for
the legislation we are going to be introducing soon. It would allow
States to have more choices. If they like the Affordable Care Act, they
can keep the Affordable Care Act. If they want to go an alternative
route that is more patient-centered, that would provide more choices
and help to restrain costs, they can do that, too, and the Federal
Government would bundle the funding that would otherwise be used for
ACA subsidies and the expansion of Medicaid in their State and allow
them to proceed along a more creative route.
We recognize how different the needs of our States are, but our
citizens should have access to affordable health care and be able to
choose the path that works best for them.
We will be talking more about the specifics of our bill when we
introduce it, but I am excited about this approach. I am not saying it
is perfect, but it is important that we put specific proposals on the
table that our colleagues can coalesce around, debate, and refine so
that we can move ahead and remove the fear and uncertainty of families
who are relying on coverage through the exchanges without putting an
undue burden on the employers who create jobs in this country.
Mr. President, let me again commend the Senator from Louisiana. He
has worked so hard to come up with a fresh approach. He has been very
open to suggestions that I and others have made.
We all understand the importance of maintaining the consumer
protections that help individuals with preexisting conditions, that
ensure that young people can remain on their parents' insurance
policies until age 26, and that prohibit lifetime caps. Those
provisions would remain. But what we want to do is to allow our States
the option of selecting a different path that will lead to patient-
directed reforms that contain costs and provide citizens with more
health care choices. The Patient Freedom Act does just that.
Again, I want to commend my colleague Senator Cassidy for his
leadership.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, let me start by commending my colleagues
from Louisiana and Maine. I really believe their approach to the
Affordable Care Act is much more reasonable than what we have heard in
the past from some.
Senator Collins just went through a litany of options of repeal and
run or repeal and replace 2 years from now. None of those are good
options, and there is a reason why there is a backlash against this
repeal effort across the country now, even among many Republicans as
they consider the chaos that would be created by simply repealing it.
I don't know the merits of the proposal they brought before us. I can
tell you, having been through the debate on the Affordable Care Act,
which went on for years, that there are many complex questions that
need to be addressed to satisfy all of us that we are doing the best we
can do to give affordable, quality health care to more and more people
across the United States.
The Congressional Budget Office just put out its report on what would
happen if we just repealed, and it is a disaster. The number of people
who are uninsured would increase by 18 million in the first new year
following enactment of a repeal bill.
Later, after the elimination of the ACA's expansion of Medicaid
eligibility and subsidies for insurance purchased through the ACA, that
number will increase to 27 million more uninsured and then to 32
million in 2026. Disastrous.
Premiums in the nongroup market--and those are folks who don't work
for companies that provide health insurance--premiums in the nongroup
market, with just repeal, would increase by 20 to 25 percent in the
first year and then reach 50 percent in the year following the
elimination of the Medicaid expansion and would double by 2026. So
fewer people would have insurance, and those who do would pay
dramatically more.
So we shouldn't take this as just a matter of being able to have a
bragging right about repeal. If we are serious about legislating, we
should be looking at the options to find out how to make the Affordable
Care Act better or how to approach it in a different manner.
I commend my colleagues on the Republican side. Here is what it comes
down to: If a handful of Republican Senators will say to the
leadership: We are not going to vote to repeal until we have a
replacement, then we can have a constructive conversation. But this
notion of repealing the Affordable Care Act and then getting around to
replacing it at some later time is irresponsible, will create chaos,
and really says
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to the American people: We are no longer committed to making sure your
family has the peace of mind of good health insurance. So I thank them
for the efforts they have put into this, and I look forward to working
with them.
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