[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 13 (Tuesday, January 24, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S421-S422]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REPEALING THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, Republicans in Congress have been on
the warpath for a long time to repeal the Affordable Care Act. In fact,
in this new Congress, their first order of business has been to pave
the way for dismantling this law. Despite the fact that 20 million
Americans have gained health insurance coverage thanks to this law,
despite people no longer being denied coverage for preexisting
conditions, despite big savings in health care costs, and despite
everyone with insurance being able to access important preventive
health services for free, my Republican colleagues have decided to
repeal it. And, after 7 years to get ready, they have no replacement,
not even a path to a replacement at this point.
Yes, they are set on repealing a law that has provided both health
and financial security to millions of Americans, with no replacement in
sight, just at this point some empty IOU for some future piece of
legislation that may or may not be any good. It is a little like being
asked to jump out of an airplane without a parachute and being told:
Trust us. We will build the parachute for you before you hit the
ground.
We don't know what this nonexistent Republican replacement would look
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like, but we sure do know what a repeal would do; it would gut health
insurance premium tax credits that help millions of Americans obtain
health insurance they could not otherwise afford. It would unwind an
expansion of the Medicaid Program that covers millions more Americans
in some 30 States that have chosen to participate, casting tens of
millions of Americans--men, women, and children--out of their health
insurance.
At the same time, it would deliver an enormous tax boon to
millionaires and billionaires, as usual for Republicans, by repealing
the revenue we used to pay for ObamaCare. This tax boon is a 16-percent
reduction in the taxes owed by millionaires and billionaires on their
investment income.
Republicans want to take health insurance away from tens of millions
of ordinary Americans and simultaneously reward those at the very top
of the income pile with a big tax benefit. So much for all the talk we
have heard from Republicans about the deficit.
At least in Rhode Island, the Affordable Care Act is working. The law
launched accountable care organizations that are improving care while
lowering costs. In Rhode Island, Coastal Medical and Integra Community
Care Network--two primary care-focused ACOs--are not only driving down
per person health expenditures but achieving high marks on quality and
on patient experience. In total, Coastal has saved $24 million over 3
years and Integra has saved $4 million in its first year as an ACO.
The Affordable Care Act also has protected seniors from the dreaded
drug price doughnut hole, and I can tell you I heard a lot about the
doughnut hole from seniors in Rhode Island when I was running for the
Senate. The Affordable Care Act has protected families where someone
had a chronic condition and couldn't get insurance, and the Affordable
Care Act has prevented insurers from throwing customers off coverage
when they get sick.
It is true that some of the health insurance exchanges haven't
attracted enough competition. We can fix that. Indeed, to help with
that issue, Senators Brown, Franken, and I are today introducing the
Consumer Health Options and Insurance Competition Enhancement Act, or
the CHOICE Act, to add a public health insurance option to the health
insurance exchanges. This public option would guarantee that consumers
always have an affordable, high-quality option when shopping for health
insurance and a strong health care fallback when markets fail.
ObamaCare may not be perfect, but it has done an awful lot of good.
Millions of Americans who lacked insurance now have it, and the rate of
uninsured Americans has fallen to 8.6 percent, about half of what it
was in 2010. Projected Federal health care costs are down nearly $3
trillion.
Instead of demolishing a system that works well for millions of
Americans with no replacement on the horizon, let's use our proposal to
make it better. Let's add a public option to our health insurance
exchanges.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, if I could address another topic now
and ask unanimous consent to speak for up to 15 minutes in morning
business.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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