[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 10 (Tuesday, January 17, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S330-S331]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OBAMACARE REPLACEMENT
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, I thank my friend from Rhode Island for
his courtesy.
Last week, the Senate took the first step in providing needed relief
for the American people from a health care plan, the Affordable Care
Act, that overpromised and underdelivered. Many people are hurting now
as a result of the failed promises of ObamaCare. They were told their
premiums would go down, that they would be able to keep the policy they
had if they liked it, and that if they liked their doctor, they could
keep their doctor, none of which has proved to be true. So it is
important that we keep our commitment to the American people. I believe
we have gotten a mandate as a result of the election on November 8 that
we keep our promise to repeal the Affordable Care Act and to deliver
health care that is affordable and is a matter of individual choice and
freedom of choice.
The basic problem with ObamaCare is that it was command and control
right out of Washington, DC, where people didn't have sufficient
humility when it comes to rearranging one-sixth of our national economy
and believed that they could, in the process of writing a 2,700-page
bill--that I doubt many of them read--take over and improve our health
care delivery system.
It was sold on the basis of providing people access to affordable
care, and in many instances, according to my constituents, they have
seen their premiums skyrocket and deductibles skyrocket, effectively
being insured but giving them no benefit of insurance coverage at all.
I realize there were some things that people liked to talk about when
they talk about ObamaCare that were positive; for example, dealing with
people with preexisting conditions. I agree that people should not lose
their health insurance coverage when they change employers and be
caught in a trap where your insurance company doesn't cover your
preexisting condition, but you don't need ObamaCare in order to deal
with that problem. People also like the idea that single adults living
at home can continue to be listed on their parents' health insurance up
to age 26. That is enormously popular on a bipartisan basis. Again, we
don't need a 2,700-page takeover of the health care system in order to
deliver some of these consensus items of reform.
I believe, and we believe, that there are certain principles that
ought to govern the replacement of ObamaCare that we will see unfold in
the coming weeks; first and foremost, moving the health care decisions
outside of Washington and back to where they belong--to patients,
families, and their doctor.
We also believe patients ought to have more tools, such as health
savings accounts which they can use to pay for their regular health
care along with perhaps a catastrophic coverage which would help them
in the event of an unexpected health care condition that would require
hospitalization. If you are young and healthy and don't need all the
money you set aside in health savings accounts, you can keep that money
and use it for your eventual retirement.
We also believe we ought to break down barriers that restrict choice
and permit Americans to pick an insurance plan that is best for them
and their family. One of the worst aspects of ObamaCare is that
Washington, DC, said: Here is your health care coverage, and we are
going to punish you with a penalty if you don't buy it, forcing people
to buy coverage that they didn't want and didn't need--for example, a
single male being forced, in essence, to buy maternity coverage. That
is just 1 of the 10 essential health benefits that was mandated in
ObamaCare that drove the cost of insurance through the roof, not to
mention the fact that the pools of people who were insured tended to be
older and less well, thus driving premiums again through the roof.
Another principle that is really important to our health care reform
replacement is empowering small businesses to provide employees with
the kind of health care coverage that meets their needs through
association health plans so they can pool their risks together to bring
costs down and to increase their choices. We believe there ought to be
flexibility on the part of the States when it comes to Medicaid
spending. We ought to, in my book, give the States the money and the
block grant and say: Come up with a health care delivery system for
Medicaid's low-income citizens that best suits their needs. We haven't
done that under ObamaCare. We have had a mandate and tied the hands of
the States when it comes to coming up with alternatives to health care
delivery.
Finally, when it comes to employers that provide 61 percent of the
health care coverage for Americans, rather than tying their hands and
driving up costs, what we ought to do is allow for increased
flexibility for employer-sponsored plans that will help bring down the
costs. We hear our colleagues on the other side of the aisle talking
about ObamaCare like it was the gold
[[Page S331]]
standard: There is nothing wrong with it. It is just perfect as it is.
Well, I don't have to tell our Democratic friends about the
unintended consequences of this partisan exercise. ObamaCare was passed
without a single Republican vote so the problems that have developed
from it are problems that were created by our Democratic colleagues.
Having said that, we hope they will work with us to come up with an
alternative which we believe would be an improvement on the status quo,
to make health care more available, at a price people can afford, with
choices that would be theirs, not a mandate out of Washington, DC.
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