[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 40 (Wednesday, March 8, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1651-S1666]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PROVIDING FOR CONGRESSIONAL DISAPPROVAL OF A RULE SUBMITTED BY THE
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senate will
resume consideration of H.J. Res. 58, which the clerk will report.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
A joint resolution (H.J. Res. 58) providing for
congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United
States Code, of the rule submitted by the Department of
Education relating to teacher preparation issues.
Calling for an Independent, Bipartisan Commission
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, in recent weeks, we have seen an
astonishing series of revelations about Russia's efforts to influence
the 2016 election in support of the Donald Trump campaign. Last week,
the Washington Post reported that Attorney General Jeff Sessions met
with the Russian Ambassador in July and September during the campaign.
Yet, during his confirmation hearing, the Attorney General said under
oath: ``I did not have communications with the Russians.''
Last Thursday, the Attorney General announced he would partially
recuse himself from any investigation into the Presidential campaign. I
note that this was a partial recusal when it comes to investigations
into Russia's influence on President Trump and his circle of advisers
and associates. The scope of the recusal is still unclear. For example,
Attorney General Sessions does not even appear to believe that his own
meeting with the Russian Ambassador on September 8, 2016, was related
to the campaign. The scope of his recusal will need to be clarified.
We also continue to learn of previously undisclosed communications
between the Russians and President Trump's inner circle. For example,
we learned last week that Jared Kushner, President Trump's son-in-law
and senior adviser, had met in December with the Russian Ambassador in
Trump Tower, along with the President's National Security Advisor,
Michael Flynn, who resigned on February 13. People across America are
wondering when the next shoe will drop.
It is becoming clear that the President is desperate to change the
headlines from these Russian revelations--so desperate, in fact, that
in a series of tweets on Saturday morning, President Trump claimed that
President Obama had wiretapped Trump Tower in an act President Trump
described as ``McCarthyism'' and ``Nixon/Watergate.'' Well, President
Trump's tweets again made news but not in the way he had hoped. It
quickly became clear that President Trump has no evidence to back up
his claims. In fact, it appeared he got his information not from
America's law enforcement or intelligence agencies but from rightwing
talk radio.
On Sunday, the former Director of National Intelligence, James
Clapper, denied the President's claims, and the Director of the FBI,
James Comey, took an extraordinary step of calling on the Justice
Department to publicly deny the President's claims. Even Republicans
like House Oversight Committee chairman Jason Chaffetz and Trey Gowdy,
chairman of the Select Committee on Benghazi, said they had not seen
any evidence that would support what President Trump tweeted.
Nonetheless, the President's spokespeople doubled down, saying that the
President does not accept the contention of the FBI Director and he
stands by his tweets.
Let's be clear. President Trump is playing games with the credibility
of his Presidency. Donald Trump is destroying the credibility of the
Office of the President 140 characters at a time. If President Trump
had consulted with his adviser--any credible adviser--prior to his
tweets, he would have learned something that is crucial, and it is as
follows: The President of the United States does not have the authority
to order a wiretap. Instead, such a wiretap can be granted upon a
finding by a court that there is probable cause to believe the target
has committed a crime or is an agent of a foreign power.
Clearly, there are more revelations to come. The only question: How
long is it going to take? How much damage will be done to the
credibility of the Office of the President and America in the process?
These recent events confirm yet again the need for an independent,
transparent, bipartisan commission led by Americans of unimpeachable
integrity to get to the bottom of this Russian attack on the United
States. Russia attacked our democracy. We need to fully understand what
happened. We certainly need to prevent it from happening in the next
election or ever again.
This week, a USA TODAY/Suffolk University poll found that Americans,
by a margin of 58 percent to 35 percent, believe an outside independent
investigation is needed into Russian involvement in our election. It is
worthy of note that just a few weeks ago, only 30-something percent of
the American people were aware of this controversy with Russia. Now
over 55 percent of people want an independent investigation. America is
listening.
We also need the Justice Department and the FBI to proceed with a
credible, impartial investigation to determine if there may have been
any criminal conduct involved.
Yesterday, the President's nominee for Deputy Attorney General, Rod
Rosenstein, appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee. If
confirmed, Mr. Rosenstein would oversee any Justice Department
investigation into the Trump administration's Russian connections
after Attorney General Sessions has partially recused himself. So I
pressed Mr. Rosenstein to clarify the scope of Attorney General
Sessions' recusal commitment. I also asked, as did Senator Feinstein,
whether Mr. Rosenstein had read the January 6 Intelligence Community
assessment into Russian election interference. I cannot explain it, but
in 2 months Mr. Rosenstein had not read this 15-page, unclassified
report that is available on the internet. It focuses on the major issue
he will face initially as Deputy Attorney General, and he told us he
had not read it.
Let me add that I respect Rod Rosenstein. He served as U.S. attorney
in Maryland, appointed first under a Republican President and held over
under a Democratic President, and that says a lot about his
professionalism as a prosecutor, his reputation, and his integrity. It
is hard for me to believe that he could come before a hearing, which he
knew would focus on the need for a special prosecutor to look into this
Russian interference, and not have been briefed to read the 15-page
public report that summarizes the conclusions of all of America's
intelligence agencies when it comes to this Russian interference.
I am sure he is an excellent lawyer who wouldn't enter a courtroom or
stand before a judge or jury without complete preparation to the best
of his ability, but yesterday, time and again, he told us he didn't
take the time to read this report. I urge him to do so as quickly as
possible, and when he reads it, he will see that our intelligence
agencies are unequivocal in their statement that Vladimir Putin was
setting out to elect Donald Trump and to defeat Hillary Clinton. This
is not a report from the Democratic National Committee; it is a report
from our intelligence agencies. And whomever Putin was trying to help,
that is secondary to the fact that he was hacking into the internet,
disclosing materials, and trying to become a material player in our
Presidential election.
Mr. President, 3 weeks ago, I went to visit Poland, Lithuania, and
Ukraine. They are watching this carefully because they have been the
victims of Vladimir Putin and Russia's attempts to interfere in their
elections, and now they hear the United States has been victimized by
Putin, as well.
One of the scholars in Poland asked me what I thought was a very
clear question, and I can't answer. He said: If
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the United States will not take the interference of Putin in your
election seriously, how can the people of Poland believe you will take
your NATO commitment to protect us from Putin seriously? Important
question. Valid question.
There are exceptions on the Republican side of the aisle, and I would
like to point out one of them. My friend, my colleague, and the
chairman of the Foreign Operations Subcommittee of Appropriations,
Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, made an extraordinarily forthright
statement yesterday about the need for an investigation into this
Russian interference. Thank goodness he is stepping away from party
loyalty and stepping up when it comes to defending this Nation. I
salute my Republican colleague for his leadership on this issue.
It is important to step back from the daily dysfunction we have when
it comes to the Russian investigation and the White House and lack of
governing and remember what is really at stake.
Five months ago, our intelligence services disclosed evidence that a
foreign adversary--one ruled by a dictatorial former Communist KGB
agent--was trying to help its preferred candidate in the U.S.
Presidential election. Think about that for a moment. An adversary of
the United States--a country which has imprisoned millions of Europeans
in the Communist system for almost half a century and which today rigs
elections and silences or murders members of the media and opposition--
committed what I believe is akin to a cyber act of war against America
in trying to elect someone they saw as more sympathetic to their
interests.
Since those early reports, we have been provided with damning
evidence by our intelligence agencies on the depth and sophistication
of this operation--so favorable to its nefarious goal that it had
Russian intelligence operatives boastfully celebrating after the
outcome of the election.
We also know that members of President Trump's campaign met with
those thought to be Russian intelligence; had suspiciously timed
communications with the Russian Government just after the Obama
administration placed sanctions on Russia; and in the case of top Trump
advisers Michael Flynn and Jeff Sessions, refused to disclose those
meetings, both in public and in one case to the Vice President and in
another case to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
No candidate would or at least should want help from a foreign
dictator to help win political office in the United States. So in a
situation like this, the response is obvious: Help in any way possible
to clear suspicions and concerns. Go forward and serve the American
people with an investigation. It seems so obvious.
Leon Panetta was on one of the Sunday morning talk shows. Leon
Panetta is a friend. I served with him in the House of Representatives.
He was the Chief of Staff to the President of the United States,
President Clinton. He served as Secretary of Defense. He headed up the
Central Intelligence Agency. He is an extraordinarily gifted and well-
thought-of person who has a record of public service that is enviable.
He was asked about what the Trump White House should do about this
allegation of Russian interference in the election and the suggestion
that they might have been complicit.
He said: Get out in front.
The President of the United States should say: I have nothing to
hide, and we will fully cooperate with an independent commission to get
to the bottom of what happened in that election. But instead, what do
we have? Fanciful--in fact, patently false--tweets by the President,
alleging a wiretap by the former President. President Trump, if he has
nothing to hide, should help us clear this up once and for all.
To my Republican colleagues, so many patriots and champions of
American national security, it is time for more to join Senator Graham
and others to step up and speak out even on the floor of the Senate
about this situation.
Each one of us in the Senate swore to support and defend the
Constitution of the United States against enemies foreign and domestic.
Clearly, the Russian attack is a call for all of us--of both political
parties--to step up. This issue is not going to go away. We are going
to continue to pursue the truth.
Nomination of Seema Verma and the Republican Healthcare Bill
Mr. President, I come to the floor to speak about the recently
released Republican healthcare repeal bill and to speak on the
nomination of Seema Verma to serve as Administrator of the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services.
CMS is an agency touching the lives of 125 million people, and 34
percent of Americans receive their health insurance under one of the
three Federal programs run by that agency--Medicare, Medicaid, and the
Children's Health Insurance Program. These programs are vital to the
health and well-being of seniors, children, persons with disabilities,
and low-income families. Yet, with those vows to repeal the Affordable
Care Act, President Trump, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom
Price, and congressional Republicans are sadly attempting to gut the
Medicaid program and to jeopardize the future of Medicare.
The head of CMS should be someone who believes in these core programs
and is willing to fight to preserve them. Instead, Ms. Seema Verma's
record--as well as comments she made during her confirmation hearing--
indicates she is more than willing to take dramatic steps to force
people to lose their health insurance or dramatically increase out-of-
pocket costs.
From her refusal to disavow efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act
to her willingness to cut the Medicaid Program, I do not believe Ms.
Verma is the right person for this job.
When it comes to the Affordable Care Act, our constituents--
Republicans, Democrats, Independents--are angry and frightened about
what the Trump administration and congressional Republicans might do to
healthcare. Based on what has finally been released, they have good
reason.
In over 2 months, Republican leaders in Washington have taken
numerous steps to change and even sabotage our healthcare system,
jeopardizing patient access to care and throwing the system into chaos.
Before President Trump took office, congressional Republicans rammed
through a budget bill, laying the groundwork for a quick, silent repeal
of the Affordable Care Act, despite the fact that they had no
replacement. Then, on his first day in office, the President signed an
Executive order to weaken the Affordable Care Act, instructing Federal
agencies to stop doing their job under the law. The President then
acted hastily to stop Federal outreach efforts--TV ads, radio spots,
and emails intended to encourage more Americans to sign up for health
insurance.
I watched yesterday as the Speaker of the House, Paul Ryan, said that
the Affordable Care Act is collapsing. Well, I can tell you, it needs
help and it should be bipartisan. Instead, the Republicans are doing
everything they can to jeopardize it.
Last week, the President met with big insurance companies to discuss
what they want for healthcare. But where were the patients, the
hospitals, the doctors, the nurses, the community health centers in
these conversations?
It is clear that congressional Republicans want to move full steam
ahead on repealing our healthcare law. The problem has always been and
still is that they can't agree on how to move forward. They don't have
a plan to protect people. Some Republicans just want to repeal. Others
want to repair. Others want to rebuild. They can throw out all the
``R'' words they can find in the dictionary, but at the end of the day,
they don't know what they want to do. These disagreements are becoming
even more obvious in the last week.
For the past few months, House Republican leaders have been meeting
secretly to craft a repeal bill. Well, they finally unveiled it. No
wonder they wanted to keep it secret.
Incidentally, this bill, which has been authored by the Republicans--
a party that claims a commitment to fiscal soundness--has not been
scored by the Congressional Budget Office. We don't know, even as it is
being considered by committees in the House of Representatives, whether
it is going to add to the deficit or not. You would think that the
party of fiscal integrity--the Republican Party--would ask that
question early on. As yet, they have no answer, and they are proceeding
full steam ahead.
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The bill, first, would end Medicaid as we know it, cutting $370
billion from the program and limiting care. Who are the beneficiaries
of Medicaid? The largest group of beneficiaries are kids and mothers.
The second most expensive group are seniors, many of them in nursing
homes who, without Medicaid and Medicare, could not even continue in a
good nursing home environment.
Keep in mind that one in five Americans currently depend on Medicaid
for their health insurance--65 million people nationwide. That includes
35 million children, 7 million seniors, 11 million people with
disabilities.
We used to say: Well, Medicaid is for poor people. Well, it certainly
is for lower income Americans, but many of them are working low-income
Americans who still qualify for Medicaid.
My friend, who has worked in the motel-hospitality industry all of
her life, in her sixties, sadly, is a part-time employee, despite her
hard work. She can't afford health insurance, but she qualifies for
Medicaid. She is part of the working poor, and she is one who needs
this benefit. If the Republicans have their way and reduce Medicaid
coverage, she could certainly lose it.
In my home State of Illinois, 650,000 people have gained healthcare
coverage under Medicaid, thanks to the Affordable Care Act. For her and
others I have met, it is the first time in their life that these men
and women--often in their sixties--for the first time in their life
have health insurance.
Of Illinois' 18 congressional districts, not a single one has less
than 71,000 Medicaid enrollees. Nearly half of all the kids in
Illinois, 1.5 million children, get their healthcare through Medicaid,
and the Republican repeal bill is going to endanger that.
That is so obvious that yesterday the Republican Governor of
Illinois, who was careful in his words and seldom reacts, came out
publicly and said that the Republican repeal bill would significantly
hurt our State of Illinois. That is from a Republican Governor.
Medicaid is the largest payer of long-term care for seniors in the
Nation and in Illinois. It is one of our best tools, incidentally, for
addressing the opioid epidemic, ensuring that those facing addiction
have access to treatment. And the Republicans want to cut that.
Medicaid has been a lifesaver to Illinois hospitals, especially in my
part of the State, downstate Illinois.
Repeal of the Medicaid expansion, as the House bill proposes, could
result in the loss of up to 90,000 jobs in Illinois.
The Republican repeal bill on healthcare is a jobs killer in Illinois
and across this Nation. We will see hospitals cutting back on personnel
in an attempt to adjust to the cutbacks in coverage and the increases
in cost brought on by the Republican repeal bill.
But the bill goes even further. It dramatically restructures the
entire Medicaid Program. When talking about the plan for Medicaid,
congressional Republicans throw around innocuous terms: per capita
caps, block grants, more flexibility, modernizing. Don't be lulled in a
false sense of security by these words. This Republican healthcare
repeal bill would significantly cut back on Federal spending on
Medicaid, shifting the cost to States, families, and individuals who
are currently struggling to get by today.
With less funding, States would be forced to throw people off of
Medicaid, limit the types of healthcare services offered, create
waiting lists, and much more. In the name of State flexibility and
modernizing, it would mean that more and more people would be showing
up in emergency rooms in Illinois and across the Nation with no health
insurance coverage under the Republican approach.
Oh, they will get care, and it will cost. They can't pay for it, and
that cost will be shifted to others with health insurance.
Unfortunately, Ms. Verma has significant experience in this exact
type of healthcare rationing. In her role as a private healthcare
consultant, she championed radical Medicaid overhauls. She supports
making low-income Medicaid beneficiaries pay more money. She believes
that Medicaid beneficiaries need ``more skin in the game.'' I wonder
how many Medicaid recipients Ms. Verma has actually sat down and met
with.
The Illinois folks whom I know are the mom working two jobs,
struggling to take time off from work to take her kid to the doctor, or
the senior who has literally spent down all of her life savings on
nursing home care and has no place else to turn.
Devising plans that restrict access to care for the most vulnerable
among us are not the qualifications I am looking for in the person who
wants to run the agency responsible for Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP.
Finally, on the House Republican repeal bill, in addition to gutting
Medicaid, the bill eliminates the Prevention and Public Health Fund,
which currently provides the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
$900 million, or 12 percent of their annual budget. The bill defunds
Planned Parenthood. The bill allows insurers to charge older people
significantly more in premiums than allowed under current law. The
bill, incidentally, dramatically cuts taxes for the wealthiest people
in America and increases costs for middle-income families. What is most
telling, as I mentioned earlier, is that the House Republicans won't
even send this bill or wait for a report from the Congressional Budget
Office before proceeding.
How many people will lose their health insurance under the Republican
repeal plan? How will out-of-pocket expenses go up for families under
the Republican repeal plan? How much responsibility and burden will be
shifted to the States under the Republican repeal plan?
For now, Republicans can claim ignorance because they have decided to
move forward before there was a report from the Congressional Budget
Office.
Thank goodness some Republicans are speaking out against this
terrible plan--maybe not for the same reasons I oppose it. But
conservatives say it doesn't rip health insurance away from more people
more quickly, and moderates worry about Medicaid--demonstrating, again,
the lack of a consensus on the Republican side when it comes to the
future of healthcare.
We have big challenges ahead--challenges that will determine whether
we have as many people in America with health insurance tomorrow as we
have today and how much it will cost.
I don't believe the Republican repeal bill is the right path forward,
and I don't believe Seema Verma is the right person to stand up and
fight for our Nation's seniors, children, and low-income families. For
that reason, I will be voting against her nomination to serve as
Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cotton). The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mrs. GILLIBRAND. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the
order for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
American Health Care Act
Mrs. GILLIBRAND. Mr. President, I rise to oppose the American Health
Care Act. This bill will destroy the Affordable Care Act, even though
the Affordable Care Act has given more Americans access to quality,
affordable healthcare than ever before in our history. It would force
middle-class families to pay more money for less care. It would leave
more people uninsured by a lot. It would allow insurance companies to
charge older Americans with what is essentially an age tax, as if our
parents and grandparents don't already pay insurance companies enough
for their care.
It would cause many working families to lose coverage from their
employers because, under this new bill, companies would no longer have
to provide their workers with healthcare, and without a mandate to do
so, we know many of them will not.
It would drastically cut Medicaid funding, which would cripple our
State budgets and would leave many seniors in nursing homes and lower
income New Yorkers stuck without a way to pay for the medical care they
actually need to survive. This bill would also take away healthcare for
millions of women, including lifesaving healthcare services like breast
exams and pap smears.
On top of all of this, as if to add insult to injury, this so-called
healthcare plan would give tax breaks to health insurance CEOs who make
more than
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$500,000 a year. How is any of this going to make people in my State or
in my colleagues' States healthier?
I am struggling to understand, amid all of the problems we seem to
have and all of the problems we need to solve in this Chamber, why this
Congress seems to have a singular fixation on taking away access to
healthcare from some of the most vulnerable people in our communities.
I continue to be amazed by how little empathy there seems to be in this
Chamber for the millions of women, older Americans, and lower income
Americans who do not have the incredible resources that we have here in
Congress and who desperately need the Federal programs this bill will
cut.
The legislation is completely out of touch with the actual needs of
the people in my State. It is driven by ideology, as if it is somehow
the wrong thing to do to help people in our States live healthy and
fulfilling lives.
If someone is diagnosed with cancer and the only way he can afford to
see an oncologist and have surgery is through an Affordable Care Act
health plan, do you think he cares whether his insurance coverage was
made possible by ObamaCare? If your parents or grandparents suffer from
dementia and the only way they can afford the constant care and medical
attention is if they sign up for Medicaid, do you think they care that
Medicaid is a program that is actually run by the Federal Government?
I don't think families care about that. I think they are much more
concerned about whether they have access to the insurance plans that
actually cover their needs, that actually treat their illnesses, that
actually give them the medicines they need, and that allow them to heal
and get back to full strength.
That is why the Affordable Care Act has done so many good things for
people in our States--because access to healthcare is a human right.
Now that millions more Americans finally have it, it is wrong to take
it away from them.
I urge my colleagues in this Chamber to think much more about the
women in their lives who need access to these preventive healthcare
services, to think about all of the hard-working Americans who do not
earn a lot, though they work full-time jobs and cannot afford it, and
to think about all of the older Americans who are really being
disadvantaged through this bill so they will not be able to afford that
24/7 or nursing care they need. This bill harms all of them, and it
makes their lives much harder, not easier.
I implore all of my colleagues to reject this bill.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the time spent in quorum
calls on H.J. Res. 58 be charged equally to both sides.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mrs. GILLIBRAND. I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. KAINE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Perdue). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Republican Healthcare Bill
Mr. KAINE. Mr. President, I rise to talk about the replacement plan
for the Affordable Care Act that is being considered by the House.
In December, I was informed that I was going to get one of my dreams
to come true in the Senate. I had asked to be on the Health, Education,
Labor, and Pensions Committee when I came in, in January of 2013, and I
was not on the committee. I had no complaints because I had other good
committees, but I was told in December that, for this Congress, I would
be added to the committee, and I am thrilled to serve on it.
When I found that I was going to be added to the committee, I knew
one of the first issues we would be tackling is what to do about the
Affordable Care Act. So I have started to pay visits around the State
to as many stakeholders as I can, including patients, doctors, medical
students, hospitals, behavioral health facilities, allied health
training programs in regions all across the State, military families in
Hampton Roads just last Friday, as well as patients and their families
in Chesterfield County last Friday. In all of these visits, my question
has been: We are going to be tackling the Affordable Care Act; tell me
what works, what doesn't work, and what we can do better. That has been
the goal.
Today's committees in the House, two committees, are considering a
plan that House Republicans have put on the table and are touting as a
replacement of the Affordable Care Act. I just want to talk about what
it would mean, if passed, to Virginians and Americans.
This plan will reduce the number of Americans with insurance. We
dropped the uninsurance rate to a historic low, but the gains that we
made would be reversed and the numbers of Americans with insurance
would go down.
It would raise healthcare costs, particularly on seniors, which I
will discuss in a minute.
It would dismantle the Medicaid Program at the service of tax cuts
for the wealthiest.
It is not an adequate replacement; in fact, it would be a dramatic
retreat, and it would be a retreat that would violate promises that had
been made by the President and other leaders.
Republicans--and I will get into this--have made a number of promises
about what a replacement would look like, but this plan falls far short
of that. That is why, within 36 hours of it being put on the table,
stakeholders across the spectrum, including the American Hospital
Association, AARP, the American Medical Association, nurses, nursing
homes, and Republican Governors have come out to either dramatically
and flatly oppose this plan or suggest significant concerns with it.
The bill has yet to be scored by the Congressional Budget Office, but
the House is trying to push it through committee, and even through the
floor, if they can, before the CBO tells the American public what this
plan would cost and, every bit as importantly, what it would cost
Americans in terms of the number of people who would lose their health
insurance.
A very poignant comment about the plan that was in the paper this
morning was from the Republican Governor of Nevada, Brian Sandoval, who
said: We Republican Governors have talked to Congress and said please
pay attention to what we have to say. States bear a huge burden on
these programs, especially Medicaid. He said: We gave ideas to the
leadership, to the majority about the replacement, but none of our
ideas are in this plan.
Without a CBO score, the American public and this body are completely
in the dark about how many people will lose coverage and about how this
will affect the American economy. Why would we move forward? Why would
we try to push a vote even in a committee, much less on the House
floor, before the CBO has given us this score? We don't serve the
American public well by doing that.
What does the replacement bill do? One, it ends the expansion of
Medicaid that was a core component of the Affordable Care Act--the
expansion that has been embraced by more than 30 States. Then, it takes
the traditional Medicaid Program and really dismantles it, instituting
a per capita fee for enrollees, and moving it more towards a block
grant program. That is the first thing it does.
Second, with respect to seniors, this plan would repeal a provision
in the Affordable Care Act that says seniors cannot be charged more
than three times the premium of a young person; it would repeal that,
and it will allow insurers to charge older customers five times as much
as younger customers. It would also give States the ability to set even
more unfavorable ratios for seniors. This will have a significant
impact on the premium of older Americans.
Third, the plan repeals the income-based subsidies, premium
assistance, and cost-sharing reductions in the current Affordable Care
Act and substitutes less generous tax credits that will not be adjusted
to average costs of plans in particular markets. So if you are a
middle-income individual in a high-cost market, you are really out of
luck with this plan.
Let me give an example of how insurance would be affected in
particular communities all over Virginia if the House plan were
adopted. If you are 60 years old and you make $30,000 per year, under
the House plan, here is
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what happens. First, the cost of your insurance can be dramatically
raised because you are not, at age 60 now, limited to three-to-one over
a young person's premium; they can charge you five-to-one over a young
person's premium. So the premium cost, if you are a 60-year-old making
30,000 bucks, goes up significantly.
Now, you get a tax credit, just as right now you get a subsidy, but
the tax credit is much less generous. So the cost of your policy goes
up, but here is what happens in communities all over Virginia--tax
credit compared to the subsidy they currently get.
In 2020, in Augusta County, VA, in the Shenandoah Valley, the tax
credit you get is worth only about half of the subsidy you would get if
we continued the Affordable Care Act. So the price is up, but your tax
credit is less generous by half of the current subsidy.
In Fairfax, your tax credit is 41 percent less than the subsidy; in
Bedford, 51 percent less than the subsidy; in the city of Norfolk, 51
percent less; in Rockingham, 50 percent less; Pittsylvania, 49 percent
less, and Pulaski County in far Southwest Virginia, 54 percent less.
So if you are a senior, your costs go up, but the assistance you get
in the tax credit is dramatically less generous than the assistance you
currently get with the premium subsidy.
The bill establishes a penalty if you don't have continuous
insurance. An insurer can charge you 30 percent more in premiums if you
go 2 months or more without insurance. So if you are unemployed, you
lose your insurance. If you forget to pay a premium for two months, you
lose your insurance. If you have any gap of 2 months, that is an
opportunity for insurers to come in and sock you with a massive
penalty.
The bill repeals funding to a healthcare provider of choice for
millions of American women: Planned Parenthood. It is really important
to be specific about this. There is not in the Federal budget a line
item that says Planned Parenthood gets axed. What Federal funds go to
Planned Parenthood? Well, first, the Hyde amendment says no Federal
funds can go to any organization for the provision of abortions--
Planned Parenthood or anybody else. Planned Parenthood receives Federal
funds because it provides healthcare to women who are eligible for
Medicaid. So when Planned Parenthood treats a woman who is Medicaid-
eligible for a medical service that is eligible for a Medicaid
reimbursement, then Planned Parenthood is able to bill Medicaid just
like a doctor's office is. And Planned Parenthood is the healthcare
provider of choice for millions of American women to do annual
checkups, pap smears, cervical cancer tests, and all kinds of basic
healthcare provisions. But under this bill, Planned Parenthood will be
disbarred from the Medicaid Program, even when they are providing
services to Medicaid-eligible women--services that are covered by
Medicaid.
The one thing about this bill that I would say--if you were going to
say: Well, who is a guaranteed winner in this bill because there are a
lot of losers, and I have tried to summarize them--the guaranteed
winner is that this bill overwhelmingly repeals the provisions that
raise revenue. This bill is a big tax cut bill.
The biggest revenue raisers in the Affordable Care Act were tax cuts
on the wealthiest citizens. There is a tax increase for nonwage income
by the top earners in the United States and an additional hospital
insurance tax that also affected individuals of high income.
What this bill does is cut taxes that almost exclusively benefit the
wealthy, while the bill is taking away these coverages and provisions
that protect middle and lower income Americans. The tax cuts in this
bill would save the top 0.1 percent of earners in the United States
about an average of $195,000 a year. So if you are in the top 0.1
percent and this bill passes, you are going to get an average of a
$195,000 tax break.
Millionaires get 80 percent of the value of the high income tax cuts
in the House bill, with the elimination of the hospital insurance tax
on high earners and the Medicare tax on investment income. In fact, a
family who is going to do incredibly well under this bill is the family
of our President, Donald Trump. As high earners, they are going to get
a huge tax cut with this bill.
I have to ask: Is this bill a healthcare bill or is it basically a
tax cut bill? You could look at this bill as basically being that the
driver of it is who benefits from it. It is a tax cut on the wealthy,
paid for by slashing Medicaid, slashing healthcare coverage, slashing
Medicare's trust fund, slashing Planned Parenthood, taking protections
like preexisting conditions that really matter to people and reducing
them. So I have a real question about whether this bill is a healthcare
bill at all or whether, under the guise of a repeal and replace of ACA,
it is a tax cut for the wealthiest, financed by slashing the healthcare
safety net.
Let me read to my colleagues what certain Republican leaders have
said about this bill in the past. The deputy leader here in the
Senate--a friend--from Texas, Senator Cornyn, said to Republican
Governors--Governors have a lot at stake in this. I was a Governor. I
know how much Governors depend on Medicaid and healthcare programs.
Here is what he said on January 19, 2017: ``Nobody is going to lose
coverage.''
No exception, no qualification. ``Nobody is going to lose coverage.''
That is what he said to the Republican Governors.
We were awaiting the CBO score suggesting potentially how many
millions will lose coverage. Many people will lose coverage. That is
not what was promised.
But, more importantly, probably, what did the President say? When the
President was campaigning as a candidate, this is what he promised the
American people: ``I am going to take care of everybody. I don't care
if it costs me votes or not. Everybody's going to be taken care of much
better than they're taken care of now.''
That was the test that he set for himself about an ObamaCare
replacement--that no one would be worse off and that many would be
better off. This does not meet that promise. It fails that promise.
At a December press conference the majority leader, Senator McConnell
said: ``Surely, we can do better for the American people,'' and ``we
will work expeditiously to come up with a better proposal than current
law.''
Again, the promise was, we will take where we are right now and we
will make it better. Nobody will lose coverage; everybody will be taken
care of better. We will come up with a better proposal than the current
law.
This is not that proposal. Turning Medicaid from a Federal guarantee
to a per capita cap on spending doesn't mean everyone is covered; it
means cuts to the States that would force States to cut eligibility,
reduce benefits or provider payments. That is why providers, like the
hospital associations and nursing homes, and the Republican Governors,
like Governor Sandoval, are deeply opposed to this particular version.
It is not better for the American people.
Protecting people with preexisting conditions, which the current bill
does, but only if they have continuous coverage--that is not better for
the American people because what if you lose your job or you can't
afford benefits or you have a break in coverage for two months, and
then you suddenly find that you are not protected, and your preexisting
condition can be used against you to bar you from insurance for the
rest of your life.
If you are unemployed and have a break in coverage, how do you afford
a 30-percent surcharge on health insurance premiums like this plan
proposes that insurance companies can sock you with? That is not better
for the American people.
In closing, I will repeat something that 13 Democrats put into a
letter to the Republican leadership in January: We want to work
together to try to make healthcare better. We are willing to sit down
at a table. We have ideas for how to improve not just the Affordable
Care Act but prescription drug prices under Medicare Part D, something
our citizens are deeply concerned about. We need to work together on
affordability. We need to work together to make sure small businesses
are able to afford coverage. We have to bring prescription drug pricing
down. I know Republicans have ideas about how to do that and Democrats
do too. The time is now to sit down and try to figure that out.
[[Page S1656]]
Passing a precipitous repeal, trying to rush it through before the
CBO scores it--a precipitous repeal that would take health insurance
away from many, that would jack costs up on seniors, that would punish
so many Virginians by reducing the subsidies they get now and replacing
them with a less-generous subsidy--that will break a promise the
President made. That will break a promise other leaders have made.
We had a HELP Committee hearing recently where we had witnesses who
had been called by Democrats and Republicans before us, talking about
things we need to do to fix and improve the Affordable Care Act. They
all agreed we needed to find improvements and fix it--all of them.
Democrats, Republicans, Independents, they all agreed we need to find
improvements. They all agreed a repeal of the Affordable Care Act would
be a catastrophe.
There were four witnesses. I asked them this question: If we need to
make improvements, what is the best way to do it? Should we do it fast,
carelessly, and secretly or should we do it slowly, deliberately, and
publicly transparently?
They all said: Of course, there is only one answer to that question.
We are talking about people's health. We should do it deliberately,
carefully, and transparently, rather than fast, carelessly, and
secretly.
We are proceeding right now in the fast, careless, and secret mode.
This particular plan comically was locked in a room and nobody was able
to see it last week. One of our Senate colleagues went over and tried
to get in to see what was in the plan--a Republican colleague, the
Senator from Kentucky. Now that the plan is out in the light of day, I
think we can see why they were hiding it--because it has so many
elements that are frightening so many people.
We can get this right. We can get this right by sitting down and
having a discussion about what I have been talking to my constituents
about: in the healthcare system right now, what works, what doesn't
work, and what we should change. If we bring constituents around the
table--individuals, hospitals, insurance companies, pharmaceutical
companies, businesses that are trying to buy insurance, doctors and
nurses--if we get people around the table, they will break us out of
the ``them versus our'' thing. We listen to them. We ask them those
questions--what works, what doesn't, what can be fixed. We will find a
path to meet the promise the President made, to meet the promise
Senator Cornyn made, which is not make anything worse but taking the
system as it is right now and making it better. We will only do that if
we engage in a dialogue rather than trying to rush. That is what I
encourage my colleagues to do.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. FLAKE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Earmarks
Mr. FLAKE. Mr. President, within a matter of days, our national debt
will top $20 trillion, notching another ominous milestone in our
Nation's long-running addiction to spending. How did we get here?
A decade ago, taxpayers learned that many of their elected
representatives were complicit in an insidious practice that rotted the
legislative branch to its core, and that is congressional earmarking.
Called a ``gateway drug'' by our distinguished former colleague from
Oklahoma, Senator Tom Coburn, earmarks have long exacerbated the
Federal Government's spending addiction.
As old as the Republic, earmarks have always been used by generations
of politicians as currency to curry favor with well-connected special
interests. After public outrage reached a critical mass, both the House
and the Senate instituted bans on earmarking, ending what had been a
corrupt pay-to-play culture in Congress.
In order to preserve this important check against the corrupting
influence of earmarks, I recently sent a letter to President Donald
Trump respectfully urging him to veto any legislation containing
earmarks that reaches his desk. I thank my colleagues, Senators John
McCain, Mike Lee, Rand Paul, Ted Cruz, and Ben Sasse, for cosigning
this letter.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record
the following letter.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC, March 7, 2017.
President Donald J. Trump,
The White House,
Washington, DC.
Dear President Trump: With our national debt set to top $20
trillion within days and growing at a rate of over half-a-
trillion dollars a year, bringing fiscal sanity to the
federal budget requires immediate attention and action. We
write today to urge opposition to any efforts by Congress to
return to earmarking.
While cutting unnecessary and wasteful spending may be
commonsense to most taxpayers, behind every dollar spent is a
boisterous special interest group with the loudest being
Congress itself. Even with a full agenda that includes
repealing Obamacare, reforming the tax code, easing the
regulatory burden, and strengthening our nation's security,
some lawmakers are focused on reviving the corrupt practice
of earmarking that was ended in 2011 after what seemed like
an endless series of corruption scandals.
Fondly described as a ``favor factory'' by a lobbyist
convicted of exchanging gifts for government grants, earmarks
represent the pay-to-play culture you have pledged to end. It
is unfathomable to those of us who fought to end earmarks and
witnessed our colleagues go to jail for corruption that pork
barrel politics would return, especially at this time when
Americans are clearly fed up with business-as-usual. However,
despite the success of the current moratorium enacted in both
chamber of Congress, there are efforts underway seeking to
revive the disdainful practice.
President Reagan vetoed a highway bill in 1987 because it
was larded up with 152 earmarks. Escalating exponentially,
the over-budget transportation bill signed into law in 2005
contained more than 6,300 earmarks. Earmark proponents are
trying to reassure that this time will be different,
promising fewer projects and even rebranding them as
``congressionally-directed spending.'' With the serious
fiscal problems facing our nation, processing thousands or
even hundreds of pork requests will only distract and delay
addressing pressing national needs and push spending
decisions once again into the murky shadows.
We respectfully urge you to make it clear that you will
veto any bill Congress sends to you containing earmarks
within the legislative text or the accompanying report. We
look forward to working with you to make Washington more
accountable and stop wasteful spending where it starts, which
is often right here in Congress.
Sincerely,
Jeff Flake.
Mike Lee.
John McCain.
Rand Paul.
Ted Cruz.
Ben Sasse.
Mr. FLAKE. To explain the urgency behind my letter to the President,
I wish to remind my colleagues in this body, many of whom were not in
the Congress before enactment of the moratorium, just how bad the
earmarking epidemic became.
For the uninitiated, the term ``earmark'' is a euphemism for when
lawmakers work to circumvent the regular, normal appropriations process
in order to secure special funding for projects in their home districts
or their States. This resulted in Federal tax dollars being doled out
to Members of Congress on a whim, bypassing normal rigorous Federal and
public vetting.
Instead of focusing on oversight responsibilities or devising
legislative solutions for the Nation's most pressing challenges,
lawmakers and staffers devoted thousands of man-hours toward filling
earmark requests. Congressional appropriators and appropriations
committees transformed into what were termed ``favor factories,''
abandoning oversight responsibilities to focus on rationing out pork.
To me, that was one of the most insidious parts of the whole earmarking
era.
We have oversight responsibilities in Congress. There is a huge
Federal budget on which we should be providing oversight, but instead
of poring over agency spending and searching for waste in our trillion-
dollar discretionary budget, Members and staff devoted countless hours
to roughly 2 or 3 percent of the Federal budget. There was so much
focus on just doling out what represented 1 or 2 or 3 percent of the
Federal budget that we basically neglected the rest of the Federal
budget in terms of oversight.
[[Page S1657]]
In less than 20 years, the number of earmarks in the Transportation
bill alone grew from 152 to 6,300. President Reagan, I believe, in 1988
famously said that he vetoed the highway bill because he hadn't seen
that much pork since he handed out ribbons at the county fair. There
were 152 earmarks in the Transportation bill that year, and by 2005 it
was 6,300. That is an increase of more than 4,000 percent.
Examples of earmarks range from a quarter billion dollars for a
bridge to nowhere in Alaska--everybody became familiar with that one;
$50 million for an indoor rainforest in Iowa, paid for by taxpayers
across the country; and half a million dollars for a teapot museum in
North Carolina. All of these earmarks added up, eventually totaling
about $29 billion a year.
It was in this environment that, along with a small group of like-
minded colleagues, I set out to put an end to this form of
transactional politics that had infected the Halls of Congress. Our
mission was to place a permanent moratorium on congressional earmarks.
It took unprecedented revelations of widespread corruption and
illegality and ultimately the jailing of lawmakers, staffers, and
lobbyists before the public's outrage forced Congress to clean up its
act. But even brazen instances of public corruption didn't stop
Congress from dragging its feet on reforms, and the majority party, my
party, paid the price at the polls in 2006.
The dominant mood of the electorate at that time--that of mistrust in
government institutions--is strikingly reminiscent of the drain-the-
swamp mentality that permeated last November's election. But despite
this surging anti-insider sentiment across the ideological spectrum,
there is now a chorus of lawmakers from both sides of the aisle working
behind the scenes to lift the congressional earmark moratorium. These
earmark defenders will trot out arguments ranging from constitutional
prerogative to the insignificance of earmarks relative to the entire
Federal budget. They will say: It is OK to earmark. We are only
earmarking 1 percent of the Federal budget.
But all of these defenses ring hollow. The constitutional power of
the purse is not a blanket mandate for Congress to spend freely;
rather, it is a fundamental duty to prevent the executive branch from
wasting taxpayer dollars. By using earmarks to funnel billions of
dollars to special interests, Congress ceases to be a check on the
executive branch. We have become no better than the free-spending
bureaucrats whom we rail against.
While we were ultimately successful in securing earmark bans in both
the House and the Senate, today we are seeing far too many cracks in
those foundations. With so many in Congress now willing to sacrifice
fiscal discipline, we have to remain vigilant against the return to
business as usual. We can't afford to forfeit the hard-fought progress
we have made.
The Senate Republican conference's vote earlier this year to preserve
the earmark ban was an important step in the right direction, but we
need to do more. That is why I sent the letter to President Trump, and
it is why, should earmarks return, I intend to challenge each one of
them on the Senate floor. Just as I did in my time in the House, I will
file amendments to force debate and force votes on these earmarks. That
way, Members can publicly defend their earmarks to the hard-working
taxpayers they represent.
As we look forward to the future, I have been encouraged by the
President's recognition of Washington's addiction to spending and his
administration's commitment to finally doing something about it. I look
forward to working with the administration to make the Federal
Government leaner, more transparent, and more accountable to the
taxpayers it serves.
Border Adjustment Tax
Mr. President, I take the floor today to express my concern with the
border adjustment tax. The border adjustment tax is quickly becoming
the centerpiece of a planned overhaul of our tax and trade policies. I
am certain that I am not the only one hearing that this approach could
make everyday consumer products more expensive at the very places
middle-class families shop the most. From the aisles at big-box stores
to the checkout lines in grocery stores, household staples could be
pushed out of reach for those who can least afford it.
In addition, there are concerns that this new policy could disrupt
global supply chains and make it harder for our country's largest
private sector employers to grow and to do business.
There are those who suggest that the known downsides to the new tax
will be a wash because the U.S. dollar will be stronger; however,
others are not so comfortable gambling the purchasing power of the
average consumer on the unpredictability of international currency
markets.
At first glance, the plan seems simple enough: Tax companies in the
United States less and tax goods made overseas more. That seems simple.
According to supporters, this would boost our exports, incentivize
companies to locate operations here in the United States, and it would
reduce our trade deficit. Unfortunately, it turns out that is not so
easy. Looking inward, we simply do not produce everything we need here
in the United States. That is why we trade with other countries in the
first place. And for the things we do make here, those products often
require inputs from all over the world. In fact, whether it is raw
material or specialty parts, roughly 50 percent of our Nation's imports
consist of inputs for U.S. production and manufacturing. Let me say
that again. Roughly 50 percent of our Nation's imports consist of
inputs for U.S. production and manufacturing, many times for products
that are then shipped overseas.
Because of our trade deals with other nations, these inputs are
cheaper than they would be otherwise. Cheaper inputs mean lower
production costs for U.S.-based businesses, which in turn allows these
companies to expand production and to reduce prices.
What will happen if we place a 20-percent tax on all imports? Looking
beyond our borders, we should also consider the reaction such a tax is
sure to trigger amongst our trading partners. If the protectionist
trade policies of the past have taught us anything, it is that
countries tend to retaliate when they believe trade obligations have
been violated. When we increase barriers to trade, nobody wins.
Do I agree that we should work to make U.S. businesses more
competitive? Absolutely. Do I agree that we need to reform our Tax
Code? You bet. Tax reform and pro-growth trade policies have been at
the top of my list of priorities throughout my tenure in Congress.
I look forward to working with my colleagues to lower corporate and
individual tax rates, eliminate costly tax earmarks, and make our Tax
Code flatter, simpler, and more conducive to growth. There will always
be winners and losers in a robust debate on reforming the Tax Code. We
ought to make sure the middle class isn't in the losing column.
I yield back the remainder of my time.
Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
American Health Care Act
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, this week our colleagues in the House
released a plan to clean up the mess left in the wake of the
ObamaCare's failed promises. The bill known as the American Health Care
Act represents the next step forward in keeping our promise to repeal
and replace ObamaCare, which continues to fail Texans and folks all
across the country.
Instead of helping more Americans and more Texans by providing more
healthcare choices, ObamaCare has actually led to dwindling insurance
options in a lot of counties across the country. In fact, it is
estimated that almost 40 percent of counties in Texas have just one
option on the exchange this year. It is hard to shop, it is hard to
compare, and it is hard to get the benefits of competition when there
is only one option because of ObamaCare.
So that is actually the opposite of what the President and the
advocates for the Affordable Care Act promised. That is what happens
when government interferes with the market and
[[Page S1658]]
takes a one-size-fits-all approach to our Nation's healthcare. The fact
of the matter is that the path that President Obama put us on is not
sustainable. It is hurting families and burdening job creators and is
taking a tremendous toll, and Americans are paying the price.
I know some of our colleagues across the aisle are relishing the fact
that Republicans, the majority, are now taking this step to keep our
commitment to repeal and replace ObamaCare. They are sitting back and
hoping that we fail. But the fact of the matter is that we would be
having this debate no matter who won the Presidency last November 8,
because ObamaCare is in a meltdown mode. It is unsustainable, and we
would be dealing with our broken healthcare system no matter who won
the White House on November 8 of last year.
One of my constituents wrote me earlier this year about her daughter.
She said that before ObamaCare, back when she could choose the policy
that she wanted, she was paying about $190 a month for health
insurance, and she had a $500 deductible. Well, that sounds pretty
reasonable--not great, but not terrible either. Then came ObamaCare.
Now her daughter, who unfortunately lost her job in the interim, must
pay almost $400 a month with a deductible that is more than $6,000. I
don't know many people who can write a check for $6,000 when they have
an unexpected healthcare crisis. So in essence, she is being forced to
self-insure and has been denied the benefit of even the insurance that
she has, even though her premium has gone up more than double, and, of
course, her deductible is now $6,000.
So to our friends across the aisle who seem to be relishing this
moment where we are actually undertaking the hard work of working
through a repeal and replacement program, I would say to them that
ObamaCare is certainly no gold standard. It is the opposite of what we
need to help our Nation's healthcare woes. There is no doubt that it is
a failed piece of legislation, full of empty promises, and one we have
to scrap.
So with the American Health Care Act, starting today in the House of
Representatives, we will repeal ObamaCare and deliver better, more
affordable healthcare choices to the American people.
This bill actually also improves Medicaid. That is another big part
of what ObamaCare did. It forced more people onto Medicaid, which is
frankly not the best quality healthcare insurance or coverage that
exists.
I remember back during the ObamaCare debate, I actually introduced an
amendment in the Finance Committee saying that if Congress passed
ObamaCare, Members of Congress needed to be put on Medicaid--my theory
being, not that it was such great coverage, but that if Members of
Congress were on Medicaid, we sure would take every step necessary to
actually improve it and make sure it works.
But this legislation actually does improve Medicaid and puts it on a
sustainable path for the future by working with the Governors, because
Medicaid is a shared Federal-State responsibility. But right now, it is
growing by leaps and bounds. It is at the consumer medical inflation
rate plus two, which means it is growing much faster than the economy
and, unfortunately, putting unprecedented burdens on our State
governments. For example, I know, talking to some Texas legislators,
they said it is easily the second--and, if they weren't careful, the
largest--expense item in the Texas State budget--Medicaid, or the State
share of Medicaid.
Of course, Medicaid was designed to help the most vulnerable in our
communities and enjoyed broad bipartisan support. Along the way, it
became less about serving those who needed it and more about unchecked
government spending, as I mentioned a moment ago. So what the American
Health Care Act does is it actually puts Medicaid on a budget. It
doesn't cut current spending in Medicaid; it just says that it will
grow at a slower rate, and it sends much of the authority to work out
the best healthcare delivery systems to our State Governors and
legislators. It gives States more flexibility along the way so they can
use resources to serve the specific needs of their citizens. I know in
my State we frequently will come to Washington and ask the Health and
Human Services Department and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, or CMS, for a waiver so we can actually use the Medicaid
money and to spend it most effectively--to build either a medical home
or to deal with chronic diseases, or some other flexibility we need in
order to deliver quality healthcare to our constituents. But the gall
of having to come to Washington, DC, and asking permission on how to
spend your own money is just too much.
I believe, actually, the American Health Care Act is the most
significant entitlement reform in decades. That is something we should
all applaud--putting Medicare and Medicaid on a more sustainable path,
not continuing to spend money that we don't have, and racking up annual
deficits and adding to our national debt, which now is in the $20
trillion range, with no end in sight.
Both Federal and State governments spend a significant amount of
money on Medicaid every year. As I indicated, last year nearly one-
third of the Texas budget was dedicated to Medicaid. The fact of the
matter is that when the States have to spend so much of the money they
tax and collect on Medicaid, then, it is unavailable for other
important purposes--law enforcement, education, and the like. There is
a crowding-out effect. By responsibly reforming Medicaid, the States
and the Federal Government will benefit, all while helping Medicaid
work for the most vulnerable in our country and putting us on a path to
fiscal sustainability.
In addition to entitlement reform, this bill will also get rid of the
ObamaCare taxes that have led to hikes in premium costs, fewer options
for patients, and more redtape for job creators. I know, being in
Tyler, TX, for example, back after ObamaCare passed, and meeting with a
woman who said she was forced, actually, to work two jobs because her
employer laid her off of her full-time job, so as to come under the cap
necessary for the ObamaCare employer mandate. So, literally, this
single mother had lost her full-time job because of ObamaCare and was
forced to work two part-time jobs just to make up the difference in
income.
We will also, in this American Health Care Act, eliminate the
individual mandate. President Obama said when he ran for office back in
2008 that he was opposed to penalizing the American people if they did
not buy government-approved insurance, but of course he changed his
tune once he was sworn into office.
We will eliminate the individual mandate so people who don't want to
purchase a government-approved plan are not forced to buy a plan they
don't want and that they can't afford or else suffer a penalty. This
bill will also help families spend money on healthcare decisions that
make the most sense to them by giving them tools so they can manage
their healthcare expenses like health savings accounts.
The American Health Care Act is an answer to a promise we made and we
have made repetitively in the last three elections since ObamaCare
became the law of the land. I believe it is imperative we keep our
promise.
Some have said: Well, this is a difficult process. I agree. There are
a lot of different ideas that people have. I agree. That is a good
thing, but in the end, we have a binary choice. We can either keep the
status quo, which is in meltdown--which is ObamaCare--or we can pass
legislation which offers more choices at affordable prices to the
American people.
I believe the choice is very clear. It is a great opportunity to
reform our healthcare system and Medicaid and move healthcare decisions
away from Washington and back to the families, back in the States where
we all live, and back in the hands of patients and their doctors. I
look forward to working with my colleagues and the Trump administration
to make this a reality.
Again, the choice is between the status quo, which is unacceptable,
which is not working, or a better way. I, for one, choose a better way:
more choices at a price consumers can afford.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Ernst). The Senator from Maine.
[[Page S1659]]
Republican Healthcare Bill
Mr. KING. Madam President, I rise to address the bill that has been
recently--and I emphasize the word ``recently''--introduced in the
House of Representatives. I believe it was introduced Monday. It is
having not a hearing but a markup today, and may be on the House floor
as soon as tomorrow or early next week.
As the President said recently, healthcare is complicated. To me, to
introduce a bill that was not available to any Members of Congress
before Monday, mark it up in committee 2 days later, attempt to pass it
on the floor of the House, and then I understand it may come directly
to the floor of the Senate without any committee consideration, it just
seems to me is a disservice to the process and a disservice to the
traditions and practices of this institution.
This is complicated. It is difficult. The ramifications and
implications of this bill, just as any other major change in our
healthcare system, are incredibly important. This is not about
ideology. This is about people. This is about the impact on people. I
want to talk about the impact of this bill, as we have thus far been
able to assess it, on the people of Maine. When I look at a piece of
legislation down here, I start with Maine. How will it affect the
people who live along our coast or inland, in the small towns, and
particularly people who are above the age of 50?
Maine happens to be the oldest State in the country. Therefore,
anything which negatively impacts seniors doubly negatively impacts the
people of my State. I feel this bill is a disaster for seniors. I
define seniors in this case as anybody over 50 because it does several
things. One of the things it does, and there should be a great deal of
discussion about this, under the Affordable Care Act, which recognizes
the fact that seniors and people who are older tend to have more
medical needs than those who are younger, it caps differential at three
times. In other words, a senior can only pay three times what a younger
person pays, and even that is burdensome in many cases.
This bill changes three to five. It will be a very substantial
increase in the payments and the costs of insurance and healthcare to
senior citizens. Now, the Kaiser Family Foundation, which is, I find,
the most nonpartisan and informative source of information on all of
these issues, has created a handy tool on their website, where you can
put in information, such as family income and age, and determine what
you would have paid under the Affordable Care Act and what you would
pay under this new bill.
What they found was--I wanted to look and see what somebody in my
State will pay. If you are a 60-year-old in Aroostook County Maine with
an income of $30,000, the subsidy--the support for the premium for
individual insurance--would fall by 70 percent. The support for your
insurance policy under the Affordable Care Act would fall by 70
percent.
Throughout our State, the average decrease would be 48 percent--
almost half. So we are talking not about some theoretical, ideological,
political thing here, we are talking about people's ability to afford
health insurance. It is about as clear as it could be. That is why it
is frustrating to me that we collectively--the Congress--are going to
be asked to consider this bill with literally no hearings, no input
from the public, no discussion of how all the pieces fit together or
don't fit together. Yet we are going to be asked--I believe, my
understanding is, we are going to be asked to vote on this bill
sometime on the floor of the Senate, without any committee
consideration, in the next week or so.
This is too important to people's lives to give it such short shrift.
It is just not right to make changes of this magnitude that are so
vital to people's well-being and literally their health and their
survival in some cases. It is unthinkable to me that we would do this
without a round of hearings and discussions and the regular order that
we supposedly honor around here as to how major legislation is to come
to the floor.
I received a letter just recently: ``Hi, Angus.''
I like it when my correspondents say ``Hi, Angus'' instead of
``Senator.''
Hi, Angus [he says]. I have worked in the pulp and paper
industry for close to 30 years. It was a good industry up
here, supported middle-class families in northern Maine. But
we have had layoffs and closures of our mills. After every
closure, I had to obtain health insurance for my family on my
own. Before ObamaCare, this was a disaster. I could only
obtain catastrophic insurance from one of two providers.
There was no way I could pay $1,500 a month for a decent
plan. After ObamaCare, I could obtain decent insurance at a
decent price. While there may have been problems for some, it
was a godsend for my family. Please help ensure we don't go
back to the old days. We are self-employed by our small
business and would not be able to pay more for less.
That is what the bill that is in the House would do, pay more for
less. By the way, how does the money work in this bill? Well, one of
the things the bill does is, my understanding, and, again, I am only
operating on what we have seen in the last 24 hours because of no
hearings, but one of the things it does is eliminate a tax on people
who make over $250,000 a year in order to cut coverage for people who
are not making that kind of money.
It is a tax cut, and shifting the cost to our citizens, particularly
our seniors. The pattern is, shift and shaft. Shift the cost, and shaft
the people who need the coverage. This is supposed to be a substitute.
It is supposed to be coverage for everyone. You have to be careful.
When people talk about access, they are talking about: Yes, you can buy
it, but if you can't afford it, that is not really access. This bill
dramatically decreases the support for health insurance premiums
through the Affordable Care Act.
The reality is, and I hear a lot of talk about how ObamaCare is
collapsing. It isn't. More people signed up this year than last year.
Yes, it is true the rates went up, but that was because younger people
were not signing up in significant numbers. We need to deal with that
issue because that makes the risk pool older and sicker and therefore
more expensive.
I have been told by insurance officials that if something like this
bill that is in the House passes and the subsidies disappear and the
Affordable Care Act goes away, the private health insurance market for
individuals, the so-called individual market, will essentially
collapse. The reality is, the uninsured population of this country has
fallen virtually in half since the passage of the Affordable Care Act.
Twenty-two million people have coverage now who did not before and we
can take it away.
The other piece I don't like about this bill is it phases things out
so the impact will not be felt until after the next election or
sometime in the future. Well, the future comes. In this case, the
future is going to be pretty desolate for people who have health
insurance now and are not going to have it 2, 4, or 6 years from now.
It is just not right.
I am one who has been saying, since I entered this body now 4-plus
years ago, that there are problems with the Affordable Care Act. We
should be working on those problems. We should be working on repairing
it, not destroying it. We should not be talking about taking healthcare
coverage away from people in this country.
I am sure I and many others will be addressing more comprehensively
the provisions of this bill as it becomes more clear, even though we
are going to have to ferret those provisions out because we are not
going to have the benefit of expert testimony and views from a variety
of points of view of how this is actually going to work.
The reality is, I don't think there is much question that this
proposal will hammer Maine and my people. I can't stand for that. I
hope the House will have a more vigorous process, they will understand
what the implications are, and take a more judicious approach so we are
not tearing insurance out from under people, we are not going to make
the cost be driven up, we are not giving a tax break to people who make
over $250,000 a year, and at the same time taking coverage away from
people who make $30,000 a year.
That is wrong. We should be repairing, not repealing. I think this
bill is not the right place to start. I stand for the people of Maine.
I stand for the people who are going to be harmed by this, whether they
are seniors or working people or self-employed people or people who
have been able to start businesses because they could get, for the
first time, insurance under the Affordable Care Act.
I believe that is our obligation. We have an opportunity to work
together.
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I am willing to work with anyone who wants to work on improving and
dealing with some of the issues that have been raised by the Affordable
Care Act.
Let's stop talking about repealing. Let's talk about fixing,
strengthening, and meeting our commitment to our fellow citizens in
Maine and across our country.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Hampshire.
(The remarks of Mrs. Shaheen are printed in today's Record during
consideration of S. Res. 84.)
Mrs. SHAHEEN. Madam President, I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BROWN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Republican Healthcare Bill
Mr. BROWN. Madam President, I join literally millions of Ohioans and
tens of millions of Americans in my concern about what the House of
Representatives is trying to do to our healthcare laws and our
healthcare system.
I leave just one statistic with my colleagues in the Senate, and that
is that in my State alone, there are 200,000 people who are now under
treatment for opioid addiction, and they are able to get this
comprehensive treatment because they have insurance under the
Affordable Care Act.
The legislation apparently coming out of the House of
Representatives, even though we do not know how much it costs, is a big
tax cut for the wealthy. We do not know how much it costs because they
are moving so quickly. It was under wraps, and now they are moving it
so quickly that the Congressional Budget Office has not even had time
to look at it and understand what it costs, nor has it been able to
tell us how many of the 22 million Americans who have insurance under
the Affordable Care Act will lose their insurance. They want to move so
fast that they are not even answering the basic questions of how much
it costs--a lot; how much it is going to add to the deficit--a whole
lot, but they will not be specific; and how many people will lose their
insurance.
As I said, today 200,000 Ohioans are getting treatment for opioid
addiction under the Affordable Care Act. Most of them--we think at
least half, but tens of thousands of them will lose their treatment
just like that, right in the middle of their addiction treatment. What
does society gain by that, other than some Republican talking points,
when people chanted for 6 years ``repeal and replace ObamaCare,'' never
having any idea how they were going to replace it--still don't--to do
it right and continue that effort.
Finally, there is the hypocrisy of this, where Members of Congress in
the House and in the Senate enjoy taxpayer-financed health insurance.
People in this body--most of the 100 Senators and most of the 435
Congressmen and Congresswomen--have health insurance provided by
taxpayers, yet they want to take insurance away from millions of
Americans. These are people who have jobs. They are millions of
Americans who have jobs, who are making relatively low wages. Some of
them may be holding two or three part-time jobs. They make low wages.
They have no health insurance provided at their job. People in Congress
who have taxpayer-funded health insurance are taking their insurance
away, stripping them of that insurance. How morally repugnant that is.
How hypocritical that is. Yet they move along their merry way.
We should defeat these efforts. We should continue to make
improvements in the Affordable Care Act, but not wholesale destruction
that will throw hundreds of thousands of Ohioans off of the insurance
they have.
I will close with this. My Republican Governor has admonished his
Republican colleagues around the country and in Congress not to repeal
the Affordable Care Act and throw 900,000 people in Ohio off of their
insurance without a replacement to take care of it. This bill coming
out of the House is far from an adequate replacement.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Tillis). The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Calling for the Appointment of a Special Prosecutor
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Mr. President, even in its early days, this
administration has embarked on a course of foreign private interest
entanglements and conflicts of interest that are truly staggering.
Just this morning, the Associated Press reported that China has
granted preliminary approval for 38 new trademarks. They are Trump
trademarks, paving the way for the President, Donald Trump, and his
family to ``potentially develop a host of branded businesses from
hotels to golf clubs to bodyguard and concierge services.''
These reports are contained in public documents. All but three are in
the President's own name. The AP report also quotes an official as
saying that ``for all these marks to sail through so quickly and
cleanly, with no similar marks . . . no issues with specification, boy,
it's weird.''
Now, the speculation is that these trademarks could not have been
issued without approval by the ruling Communist Party, that hierarchy
had to be involved, and that awareness had to involve their approval
for these intellectual property interests. The benefit is to the
President through his private interests. The fact is, the President of
the United States should be beholden only to the American people, not
to personal profit, but in fact these trademarks raise the specter that
the President possibly is beholden to the approving officials in China
even more than to the American people. That is an issue that merits
investigation. Like so many issues arising in this young
administration, the question is, Who will do that investigation?
The lawyers in China representing Donald Trump applied for these
trademarks in April of 2016, even as then-Candidate Donald Trump railed
against China at his campaign rallies, criticizing Chinese currency
manipulation, its intellectual property theft, its attraction of jobs
from this country to theirs. The question arises, What has he done
about those issues? In fact, China continues to manipulate its
currency, continues to attract jobs from this country, and continues
its aggressive policies in the area around that country.
The question is whether an inquiry is appropriate--which certainly it
seems to be--and who will supervise it. It is the same question that
arises with respect to Russian interference in our electoral system and
the potential ties between Trump team officials and the Russians who
committed those acts. Those ties have been established by evidence that
is now incontrovertible because it is admitted by the officials
themselves, now Attorney General Jeff Sessions and former National
Security Advisor Michael Flynn.
It is now a matter of factual record that Russia engaged in a series
of deliberate cyber attacks in order to carry out an unprecedented plot
to undermine the 2016 elections with the goal of assisting Donald
Trump. The growing body of evidence clearly and unmistakably indicates
that Trump campaign officials were in contact with Russia during the
election. These deeply troubling claims of coordination with a foreign
government to influence an American election certainly deserve exacting
scrutiny and investigation, and the more we learn, the more troubled we
become. In fact, we are rapidly careening toward a constitutional
crisis. These recent revelations about Vladimir Putin's government and
former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn resulted in his
resignation. There have also been details about contact between
Attorney General Sessions, our former colleague, and the Russian
Ambassador that have caused his recusal from all inquiries of that
subject matter.
I believe a special prosecutor must be appointed to investigate the
Russian interference and meddling in our election, the massive cyber
attack misinformation, and propaganda campaign conducted to subvert
that election. The potential for cooperation, condoning,
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connecting between the Trump officials and Russia certainly merits
investigation as well. Without reaching conclusions, the special
prosecutor ought to investigate and then reach a conclusion. His
conclusion should be based on fact, not surmise or speculation.
For weeks, I have called for a special prosecutor to investigate
possible ties between members of the Trump campaign, the Trump
transition, and the Trump White House to Russian officials who sought
to interfere with our election. I support the Intelligence Committee in
conducting its investigation. I would favor the appointment of a
special commission or a select committee of the Congress to do
factfinding, make reports and recommendations in a fully transparent
way, but only a special prosecutor can take action based on criminal
intent. Only a special prosecutor can pursue violations of criminal
law, to not only investigate but also bring charges and seek
appropriate punishment and remedy. Only the Deputy Attorney General of
the United States can appoint a special prosecutor because the Attorney
General has recused himself--in other words, taken himself out of all
of the areas of this subject matter. That is why I asked yesterday that
the nominee for Deputy Attorney General, Rod Rosenstein, commit to
appoint a special prosecutor.
His answer to me was that he wishes to wait until he is approved by
the Senate--assuming his confirmation occurs--to decide whether to
appoint a special prosecutor. He claims he needs to familiarize himself
with the facts and circumstances of any ongoing investigation before he
can make a decision. With all due respect, the facts he needs to know
are already established. They are already a matter of public record.
They are already known to the American public. There is an
investigation ongoing by the FBI--and with good reason--into Russian
meddling in our elections, this massive campaign of misinformation and
cyber attack that they purposefully conducted to influence the outcome
of our election.
We know the Justice Department must investigate and pursue the
ongoing investigation, wherever the evidence leads. Part of that
evidence inevitably will be meetings that were conducted by his boss,
the Attorney General of United States, Jeff Sessions, which is why the
Attorney General has recused himself--because he could be involved in
that investigation as a witness, as a subject, even possibly as a
target, as could the President himself.
To close that investigation, the Deputy Attorney General, or whoever
is conducting it, needs to question the Attorney General of the United
States. To conduct that investigation, that questioning must occur. So
the Deputy Attorney General would be expected to be investigating his
boss. If he decides to conduct that investigation himself, he must
appoint a special prosecutor to establish the independence of that
inquiry, to assure that in reality and in appearance the American
public is assured that the investigation is independent, objective,
impartial, vigorous, and fair.
The facts that warrant a special prosecutor are already known and
they are already a matter of public record. That is why I believe he
must commit himself now, before his confirmation--in fact, as a
condition of his confirmation--to take that action, which preserves the
credibility and public confidence in the Department of Justice that he
observed very eloquently in his confirmation hearing as one of his
central objectives.
There is a lot of precedent for this step. The most prominent one
perhaps is Elliot Richardson, when he was the Attorney General
designee. He was requested by the Judiciary Committee, at that time, to
make the same kind of commitment--and he did. He kept his promise. He
appointed Archibald Cox to be special prosecutor, and the Watergate
scandal was appropriately investigated and pursued. That example--when
Elliot Richardson had enough facts, just as Rod Rosenstein does now--
ought to be the lodestar here. It ought to be the model for his
commitment to appointing a special prosecutor.
The simple fact is, Rod Rosenstein, like Elliot Richardson, knows
everything he needs to know to be sure a special prosecutor is
necessary, and especially because he is a career prosecutor with a
distinguished record, and because he has that intellect and integrity
that would qualify him probably to be confirmed, he should know it is
the right thing to do. Maybe he will do it if he is confirmed, but it
would serve the interests of justice, and it would help to sustain and
enhance the trust and public confidence in the Department of Justice if
he were to do it now, as Elliot Richardson did many years ago.
We live in an extraordinary time. The conflicts of interest and
foreign entanglements that threaten our Nation, beginning at the very
top of this administration, impose a unique mandate on the Department
of Justice. The recusal of the Attorney General from this investigation
indicates that leadership and integrity are necessary at every level as
never before. That is why, in this extraordinary time, I urge the
Deputy Attorney General nominee, Rod Rosenstein, to do the right thing
and make sure there is an investigation that is independent and
vigorous, as well as fair and full; that we know all of the facts
eventually and that action is taken appropriately to deal with the
Russian interference in our election, the potential ties between the
Trump administration--before and after the election--in those improper
interferences by the Russians in our election, and that the danger of
coverup, indicated by the potential false statements made by Jeff
Sessions before the Judiciary Committee and Michael Flynn elsewhere, be
stopped before it starts. Only a special prosecutor can provide the
unbiased and fair answers that are so urgently needed.
The American people deserve an explanation. They deserve an
explanation for the trademarks that have been issued to Donald Trump in
China. They deserve an explanation by a special prosecutor on Russian
meddling and Trump ties to that meddling. Whether the independent and
special prosecutor broadens the scope of that investigation to include
the entanglements or conflicts of interest involving China is a
question that will have to be addressed by that official, but this much
we know now. We are rapidly careening toward a constitutional crisis, a
crisis of credibility as well as legal challenges. The historic
opportunity and obligation this nominee owes the country cannot be
avoided.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
Apparently there is another speaker. I withdraw that suggestion.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Colorado.
Nomination of Neil Gorsuch
Mr. GARDNER. Mr. President, looking at today's headlines and
listening to the news, it may seem as if colleagues from across the
country--Democrat, Republican--don't always agree on some things, let
alone anything. I think we are starting to see a consensus emerge--a
very good, genuine agreement emerge between liberals and conservatives,
Democrats and Republicans on at least one matter in Washington, DC, in
the Senate: Neil Gorsuch. That agreement is on Neil Gorsuch.
Neil Gorsuch is an exceptional nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court. In
fact, Judge Gorsuch is, by many extents and by many commentators,
arguably one of the most talented jurists we have nominated to the
Court in a very long time, at least in modern history.
As the Denver Post in Colorado said: ``Gorsuch is a brilliant legal
mind'' who has a reputation for ``[applying] the law fairly and
consistently.''
You can't ask for much more than that--somebody who will apply the
law fairly and consistently. However, this shouldn't surprise anyone
who knows Judge Gorsuch. Judge Gorsuch has always enjoyed overwhelming
bipartisan support. All we need to do to see that is to look back to
2006 when we could see that most clearly in the U.S. Senate.
In 2006, when Judge Gorsuch was unanimously confirmed to the Tenth
Circuit Court, 12 current Democratic Senators, including the minority
leader and Senators Leahy, Feinstein, and Durbin, all were in office.
It was a nomination in 2006 that was unanimous, a nomination that went
by voice vote.
He was so universally appealing to the Tenth Circuit Court that he
had an introduction at the Judiciary Committee by both a Democratic
Senator
[[Page S1662]]
from Colorado and a Republican Senator from Colorado, joined by every
single person on the floor to vote yes unanimously.
They approved his nomination. And to give you even greater context
about this vote, the people who made this vote, the approval of Judge
Gorsuch in 2006 to the Tenth Circuit Court came in addition to the 12
people I just mentioned who are here today and who were here then. It
also came with the support of then-Senator Obama, Senator Biden,
Senator Clinton, and Senator Kerry.
Approximately 11 years later, now that Judge Gorsuch has proved
himself to be a mainstream jurist, a consensus builder, a profound
legal mind with an even temperament and affable nature, we have a
chance again to put this incredibly brilliant mind on the Nation's
highest Court.
Judge Gorsuch is a faithful adherent to the Constitution and the
organizing principles of this great democracy. I have no doubt that
Judge Gorsuch will--and should--enjoy similar levels of approval among
my distinguished colleagues across the aisle.
I also wish for people to learn more about Judge Gorsuch personally
and to tell some stories about growing up in Colorado. It is a story
about how a young man from Denver, CO, through his own hard work and
academic excellence, rose to the highest echelons of the legal
profession and to the nearly universal acclaim of Democrats and
Republicans.
A fourth-generation Coloradan, Neil Gorsuch learned the value of hard
work at a young age from his grandfathers. His maternal grandfather,
Dr. Joseph McGill, began his adult life by working in Union Station,
the main railway terminal in Denver. From there, Dr. McGill put himself
through medical school and became a prominent surgeon. With his wife,
Dorothy Jean, Dr. McGill raised seven children, all of whom he gave a
better life to and put through college.
Neil's paternal grandfather, John Gorsuch, was his legal inspiration.
After serving in World War I, John Gorsuch put himself through
undergraduate and law school at the University of Denver by driving a
trolley car. Upon graduation, John built a law practice focusing on
real estate law. He also made time to help Denver's welfare department
and participate in the Kiwanis Club and numerous other civic
organizations. Later, John started what was at one time one of the
largest law firms in Denver, Gorsuch Kirgis, where he practiced well
into his eighties.
It was this family work ethic that drove Neil to get his hands dirty
and pursue blue collar jobs at a young age. In Colorado, he moved
furniture, he shoveled snow, he mowed lawns, and he even shoveled some
more snow in the great State of Colorado. It was this work ethic--and a
lot of shoveling of snow--combined with his family's appreciation of
higher education that helped Neil consistently realize academic
excellence.
By now, I think this Chamber is well familiar with Judge Gorsuch's
sterling academic credentials, receiving his undergraduate degree at
Columbia, law school at Harvard, Ph.D. at Oxford. I don't think any of
us can forget, nor should we, the fact that he spent a summer at the
University of Colorado.
Intellect alone doesn't get you through the halls of these storied
academic institutions. It requires hard work, independence--two values
of the West; two values in addition to many other western values that
Judge Gorsuch holds.
It is these values, these western perspectives that the Supreme Court
desperately needs to grow. Judge Gorsuch is a lifelong outdoorsman. He
enjoys fly fishing and skiing. In fact, I have been told that he is a
double black diamond skier. His wife, Louise, cares for animals in a
small barn on his land.
In addition to his love of the outdoors and his appreciation of
nature's beauty, Judge Gorsuch understands the complex legal issues
facing westerners and our Western States.
Since 2006, Judge Gorsuch served on the Federal court that covers the
Tenth Circuit Court based out of Denver that covers six other Western
States--Colorado, Oklahoma, Kansas, New Mexico, Wyoming, and Utah.
Those States represent nearly 20 percent of the land of the continental
United States.
His service on this court has provided him with a unique
understanding of public lands, water, and Tribal issues that many of
the other Western States in the region face. Some of the most complex
legal challenges in water law and others come before his court as a
result. That experience would serve all of our Western States well when
utilized from the U.S. Supreme Court.
Over the coming days, I plan, along with many of my other colleagues,
to elaborate on why Gorsuch's western values and perspective make him
an outstanding choice for the U.S. Supreme Court. I look forward to
working with colleagues on both sides of the aisle to make sure he gets
a timely up-or-down vote. From the highest echelons of the legal field
to the Tenth Circuit Court, to the U.S. Supreme Court, Judge Gorsuch
would make us proud, and he would serve this country well.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from West Virginia.
(The remarks of Mr. Manchin pertaining to the introduction of S. 581
are printed in today's Record under ``Statements on Introduced Bills
and Joint Resolutions.'')
Mr. MANCHIN. I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Hawaii.
Trumpcare and the Nomination of Seema Verma
Ms. HIRONO. Mr. President, it seems appropriate that we are debating
the nomination of Seema Verma to head the Center for Medicare and
Medicaid Services the same week Republicans in Congress introduce a
plan to dismantle the Affordable Care Act.
Over the past 8 years, President Obama and the Democratic Party have
been fighting to make sure that everyone in this country has access to
affordable, quality health insurance. President Trump and his allies in
Congress do not share this commitment. Instead of debating how best to
expand access, they are fighting with each other to see just how many
people they can kick off insurance rolls--all in a crusade, apparently,
to save some people money.
This is not a crusade to improve the lives of as many Americans as
possible. It is a crusade to serve their radical antigovernment
ideology. In fact, ``ideology over people'' is a useful shorthand to
describe the first 2 months of the Trump administration.
The problem with their ideological debates is that people are left
out of the debate. Do we really know what it is like to be without
health insurance? Under the plan to repeal the ACA, 20 million people
in our country will be without health insurance, without healthcare.
What if you were one of those people?
This question is not an academic one for me. I know what it is like
to live without health insurance. When my mom brought my brothers and
me to this country--I am an immigrant--her job did not provide health
benefits. My greatest fear growing up as a little girl in this country
was that my mom would not be able to go to work if she got sick. If she
wasn't able to go to work, where would money for food and rent come
from?
That is not the kind of fear we want to impose on millions of
children in our country, but we will be doing just that to the 20
million people and their families who gained health insurance under the
Affordable Care Act--many, for the first time in their lives. They did
not have to be worried every single day that their child or their
parents would be sick and would not be able to afford the care that
they needed. This is not an academic exercise for any of them. They
will be hurt by what we are being asked to do. It is not an academic
exercise for the millions more who will lose their insurance coverage
under TrumpCare.
But no one should be surprised. This administration and their allies
in Congress continue to demonstrate a commitment to alternative facts.
If you believe their alternative facts, TrumpCare would improve
healthcare access for working families, seniors and women, and
Americans would have, as the President said, ``much better healthcare
for much less money.''
But in reality, TrumpCare will do the opposite. TrumpCare would end
by 2020 the ACA's Medicaid expansion that millions of people in our
country depend on every day. The expansion not
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only provided health coverage to millions of people for the first time,
but it also helped to keep hospitals in rural and underserved
communities from closing down. These rural hospitals exist all across
the country. In its place, TrumpCare would change how States receive
Medicaid funding, and it would do so in a way that ensures that these
programs cannot keep pace with the rising cost of health insurance in
their counties and in our country.
Under this new system, States would have less money to spend on
Medicaid recipients and face the prospect of tightening eligibility and
slashing benefits. This would be particularly devastating in Hawaii,
where we saw the number of people enrolled in Medicaid grow by nearly
20 percent under the ACA. Medicaid has had a transformative impact on
tens of thousands of lives in Hawaii and millions of others across the
country.
Anne from Oahu walked into the Kokua Kalihi Valley Clinic 3 years
ago. She had no health insurance, and she was pregnant at the age of
15. The doctors at the clinic helped Anne apply for Medicaid, which
helped her afford prenatal care, gave her support to stay healthy and,
very importantly, to stay in school.
Medicaid helped Anne and her husband Dan, age 17, welcome a healthy
baby boy named Joseph. Today, Anne is a graduate of Farrington High
School, works part time, and has plans to become a pediatric nurse
practitioner. Anne, Dan, and Joseph now have insurance through Dan's
employer.
Reducing access to this critical program is wrong. Trying to convince
the American people they would be better off with the results of these
kinds of drastic negative changes to Medicare and Medicaid is yet
another alternative fact.
I am encouraged that four of my Republican colleagues spoke out
forcefully against any bill that would eliminate the ACA's Medicaid
expansion. We need more Republicans of conscience to make their voices
heard on this important issue.
TrumpCare would also be devastating for seniors in Hawaii and across
the country. Under TrumpCare, insurance companies would be able to
charge older Americans up to five times more for an equivalent health
plan than they would be able to charge a younger person. For a
President and a party that professes to hate taxes so much, they don't
seem to have a problem with what amounts to an age tax.
TrumpCare's changes to Medicaid would also have devastating
consequences for States like Hawaii, where our rapidly aging population
depends on Medicaid to pay for nursing home and other care. The
President made the American people a promise--that his healthcare plan
would not touch Medicare. But the cumulative effect of TrumpCare's
assault on our seniors--our kupuna--would force the Medicare trust fund
to go broke 4 years sooner than expected. For reference, the ACA
extended the life of the Medicare trust fund by 10 years.
This would have a devastating impact for seniors like Anne and Lanny
Bruder from Kauai. Lanny is 80 years old and working three jobs to make
ends meet. He has had two knee replacements and a heart attack. Anne
has glaucoma and pays a lot of money out of pocket for her prescription
eye drops. They can't afford to pay more for their health insurance,
which is exactly what is going to happen under TrumpCare.
TrumpCare would also have a profoundly negative impact on women
across the country. The President's plan would completely zero out
funding for Planned Parenthood. This lifegiving, lifesaving
organization would no longer be eligible for Medicaid reimbursements or
Federal family planning, which would leave a $500 million hole in their
budget.
Republicans continue to claim falsely that community health centers
would fill the gap in service left by the demise of support for Planned
Parenthood--not true. Most of these community centers, whose resources
are already stretched thin, do not provide women's healthcare or family
planning services. In other words, they would not be able to replicate
the services that Planned Parenthood provides all across the country to
millions of women and families.
Planned Parenthood operates two clinics in Hawaii, one on Oahu and
one on Maui. They are the forefront of innovation in increasing access
to family planning services across the State. They launched an
innovative new mobile application that would allow doctors to provide
digital consultations to women on neighbor islands for the purpose of
prescribing birth control. Recently, Planned Parenthood made their
first delivery to the island of Molokai, a largely rural island with
little permanent medical infrastructure. This is the kind of innovation
we should be encouraging, and it is precisely the type of program that
could get cut if Planned Parenthood loses its Federal funding.
I often say that there are people in this country getting screwed
every second, minute, and hour of the day. Instead of reducing that
number, which should be our goal, TrumpCare would increase the number
of people who get hurt in our country. The wealthiest of the wealthy in
our country would benefit because--not only would all these things
happen under TrumpCare that would be devastating to families, to women,
to our seniors--TrumpCare would also give a big tax break, a big tax
cut to the wealthiest people in our country. They don't need that kind
of tax cut. Do people making over $2 million a year really deserve
another $150,000 a year in tax cuts? I don't think so.
TrumpCare would be a disaster for the middle class, I am going to do
everything in my power to stop it from being the law of the land. We
have come too far in the past 8 years to go backward. The first way we
can fight back against this plan is by rejecting the nomination of
Seema Verma, who would be in charge of implementing TrumpCare as the
head of CMS.
Ms. Verma is unqualified for the job she has been nominated to do.
She has absolutely no experience running a major Federal department and
has virtually no budgeting experience. This is deeply disconcerting
because as the Administrator of CMS, she would oversee a $1 trillion
budget, which is twice as large as that of the Pentagon.
Ms. Verma would also continue the President's assault on women's
healthcare. During her confirmation hearing, Ms. Verma said she opposed
the ACA's requirement that all health plans cover pregnancy care. It is
because of this attitude that millions of women across the country are
participating in a Day Without Women today. In solidarity with them, I
will fight tooth and nail against TrumpCare and encourage my colleagues
to oppose Seema Verma's nomination to serve as the Administrator of the
very agency that is supposed to be protecting healthcare for all
Americans.
I yield the floor.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. President, I oppose H.J. Res. 58, another
Congressional Review Act resolution that would roll back an agency's
efforts to implement a law and prevent it from doing its job in the
future.
In this case, we are considering eliminating Department of Education
regulations on teacher preparation programs. In the 2008
reauthorization of the Higher Education Act, Congress required States
to assess and identify low-performing teacher preparation programs to
ensure that every teacher graduates ready for the classroom. Following
a process that began in 2011, the Department of Education released a
draft rule in 2014. That draft wasn't perfect and needed more
flexibility for States and institutions of higher education. After an
extended comment period, the Department revised the rule 2 years later.
Though it may not satisfy everyone, the final rule provides clarity in
line with Congress's direction.
Congress has the opportunity, with the reauthorization of the Higher
Education Act, to improve upon these provisions. We can build on the
State-driven assessment that this rule provides and further refine the
system to make sure that data is being used to better prepare a more
diverse class of teachers for our schools.
If the Trump administration does not want to wait for further
legislation, it can engage in a new rulemaking, but as with all
Congressional Review Act resolutions, this resolution is a meat ax
rather than a scalpel. It repeals the rule and prevents the Department
from carrying out its responsibility to ensure high-quality teacher
preparation programs. This is simply the wrong approach, and I urge a
no vote.
[[Page S1664]]
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cotton). The Senator from Washington.
Mrs. MURRAY. Mr. President, I come to the floor to once again urge my
fellow Senators to vote against the pending resolution and support
strong and accountable teacher preparation programs in America today.
There are so many great teacher prep programs across the country that
are supplying our teaching students with the tools they need to succeed
in the classroom, but there are also teacher prep programs that are
struggling and need support to make sure they are producing great
teachers for our schools.
This rule ensures that students can make informed decisions about
teacher preparation programs and that they have access to this
information before they take out massive amounts of student debt. It
gives States information about the schools that are struggling so
States can provide those schools the tools and resources they need to
improve their teaching preparation programs.
Finally, eliminating this rule will give Secretary DeVos more power
over our higher education programs--a risk we should not be willing to
take without learning more about Secretary DeVos's vision for our
higher education system.
Every student deserves to have an amazing teacher in the classroom.
This rule helps ensure that is possible. So I urge Senators to think of
the future teachers and students who will be impacted if this
resolution passes.
Thank you.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SASSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. SASSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that at 2:30 p.m.
today, all remaining time on H.J. Res. 58 be yielded back.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. SASSE. Mr. President, I rise to restate my support for H.J. Res.
58, a resolution to overturn the Obama administration Department of
Education's rule regulating future teacher preparation programs from
Washington, DC.
This teacher preparation mandate actually assumes that Washington
bureaucrats are competent to micromanage teacher training programs
across America. There are 27,000 such programs, by the way, and this
micromanagement is absurd. We all agree that education matters, that
teachers matter, that teacher training programs matter, and that kids
are the future of our country, but I ask my colleagues to acknowledge
the expertise and to respect the reforms already begun at the district
and State levels and to reverse this misguided Federal regulation of
teacher preparation programs.
I would like to close by reading several quotations from those who
would have been affected by this regulation had it gone into effect.
This first quotation comes from the American Federation of Teachers.
Their public statement on the final rule, on October 12, 2016, reads as
follows:
It is, quite simply, ludicrous to propose evaluating
teacher preparation programs based on the performance of the
students taught by those program's graduates. Frankly, the
only conceivable reason the department would release
regulations so out of sync with the Every Student Succeeds
Act and President Obama's own call to reduce high-stakes
testing is they are simply checking off their bucket list of
outstanding issues before the end of their term.
The final regulations could harm students who benefit the
most from consistent, high-quality standards for teacher
preparation programs. The regulations will create enormous
difficulty for teacher prep programs and place an unnecessary
burden on institutions and states, which are also in the
process of implementing ESSA.
My second quotation comes from the comments of the provost and the
chair of the Department of Education at Creighton University in Omaha,
NE, dated February 2, 2015, of the comment period:
As stated earlier, the regulations represent a significant
financial burden to institutions, local school systems, and
states. In the state of Nebraska, there are over 500
individual teacher preparation ``programs'' subject to the
complexities of these regulations.
Again, these regulations are 700 pages.
Even as a system is developed, issues regarding privacy,
low numbers, and student demographics would impact results
unfairly and result in decisions unlikely to improve teacher
preparation programs and student learning at PK-12 schools
[in Nebraska].
My third and final quotation comes from the Association of
Independent Colleges and Universities of Nebraska, and they wrote the
Department of Education about this rule as follows:
[T]he budgetary impact of this regulation is significantly
understated, if not laughable. No financial support for
states, school systems, or institutions of higher education
to implement the requirements is proposed. The regulations
create new requirements for colleges, schools, and states to
track and report on candidates and teachers for many years.
Those systems are not in place. The cost estimates make
inaccurate assumptions that colleges and states already have
the systems in place for collecting, analyzing, reporting,
and utilizing data (federally-mandated data which may or may
not be valid or reliable for the purposes for which it is
intended to be used). It also provides a timeline that is
unworkable for most states and institutions.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the following statements
and letters be printed in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From www.aft.org, Oct. 12, 2016]
AFT's Weingarten on Teacher Preparation Programs Regulations
Washington--Statement from American Federation of Teachers
President Randi Weingarten on the Department of Education's
final regulations for teacher preparation programs.
``It is, quite simply, ludicrous to propose evaluating
teacher preparation programs based on the performance of the
students taught by a program's graduates. Frankly, the only
conceivable reason the department would release regulations
so out of sync with the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) and
President Obama's own call to reduce high-stakes testing is
that they are simply checking off their bucket list of
outstanding issues before the end of their term.
``The final regulations could harm students who would
benefit the most from consistent, high-quality standards for
teacher preparation programs. The regulations will create
enormous difficulty for teacher prep programs and place an
unnecessary burden on institutions and states, which are also
in the process of implementing ESSA.
``Instead of designing a system to support and improve
teacher prep programs, the regulations build on the now-
rejected high-stakes testing system established under NCLB
and greatly expanded under this administration's Race to the
Top and waiver programs. It's stunning that the department
would evaluate teaching colleges based on the academic
performance of the students of their graduates when ESSA--
enacted by large bipartisan majorities in both the House and
Senate last December--prohibited the department from
requiring school districts to do that kind of teacher
evaluation.
``Teacher prep programs need to help ensure that teachers
are ready to engage their students in powerful learning and
creating an environment that is conducive to learning. These
regulations will not help achieve that goal. These
regulations do not address ways to help the current status of
the teaching profession: the shortages, the lack of diversity
or the high turnover.
``While the department has made minor tweaks, the flawed
framework remains the same. The regulations will punish
teacher prep programs whose graduates go on to teach in our
highest-needs schools, most often those with high
concentrations of students who live in poverty and English
language learners--the exact opposite strategy of what we
need. As we brought up in January 2015--in our comments to
the department's proposal--if programs are rated as the
department proposes, teacher prep schools will have incentive
to steer graduates away from assignments in our toughest
schools, and that will only make matters worse.
``If we want to get it right, we should look to countries
like Finland, where prospective teachers receive extensive
training in their subject matter and teaching strategies
combined with clinical training. Finland has no alternative
prep programs. Programs are highly selective and free of
cost; their graduates go on to work in supportive,
professional environments with strong unions, fair pay and
benefits, and without high-stakes testing.''
____
Office of the Provost,
Creighton University
Omaha, NE, February 2, 2015.
Re Docket ID ED-2014-OPE-0057.
Hon. Arne Duncan,
Secretary, U.S. Department of Education,
Washington, DC.
Dear Secretary Duncan: We would like to introduce
ourselves. Our names are Edward
[[Page S1665]]
O'Connor, Provost, and Debra L. Ponec, Professor and Chair in
the Education Department at Creighton University, which is
located in Omaha, Nebraska. We are responding to the U.S.
Department of Education's proposed regulations for teacher
preparation programs released in the Notice of Proposed Rule
Making (NPRM) on December 3, 2014.
Like other teacher preparation programs in institutions of
higher education throughout the nation, the Education
Department at Creighton University embraces accountability
for our work. The faculty are eager to learn more about the
effectiveness of our graduates and seek continual program
improvement to ensure their profession-readiness in the
classroom. Our preparation programs currently employ
accountability mechanisms such as these:
National and state accreditation
Praxis II testing
Survey data from graduates and employers
Feedback from PK-12 school partners and Advisory Boards
Continuous Review of Programs
The institution's teacher preparation programs also undergo
continual reform influenced by the effective practice,
feedback from our K-12 partners, local and national workforce
demands, new requirements from our legislature and state, new
professional standards for preparation, and funding to
support new initiatives. The Education Department at
Creighton University has developed partnerships with public
and private schools where instruction and clinical practice
are on-site; integrated ``best practices'' into evidence-
based teacher preparation; placed students in high need,
diverse settings for clinical practice throughout the
program; and provided data on the impact of our programs on
our website. Our programs have a documented high placement
and retention rate for our graduates. Our teacher preparation
program actively supports accountability mechanisms that are
fair, transparent, valid, reliable, feasible, and useful for
program improvement. The proposed regulations initiated by
the U. S. Department of Education do not meet these criteria.
Overall, if these proposed regulations were adopted, they
would draw energy, funding, and attention away from
innovative reforms, proven accountability initiatives, and
overall program improvement currently under way in teacher
preparation programs across the country. Some of the specific
areas of concern are as follows:
The specific requirements outlined in the proposal usurp
the rights of the state and higher education institutions to
determine what indicators identify proficiency of teacher
education graduates and their preparation programs. This
unfunded mandate represents a significant financial burden to
institutions, local school systems, and states. The costs of
implementing these regulations have been woefully
underestimated with the understanding that no federal funding
would be available to move the proposed regulations forward.
The proposed regulations require data systems to track and
report on teacher education candidate effectiveness for
multiple years. Many states do not possess the technology
capacity to develop highly sophisticated data collection
systems which will collect, analyze, report, and utilize this
data in a meaningful manner.
The proposed regulations have generally not been tested for
validity and reliability, and attaching high-stakes
consequences at this point is of significant concern. For
example, using PK-12 student academic achievement and growth
to evaluate teacher performance is questioned by leading
research organizations and education scholars as having
questionable validity and reliability for making teacher
effectiveness decisions. Utilizing this approach of
evaluating teacher performance to his/her teacher preparation
institution is an even weaker link given the largely unknown
impacts such as implications of time and place of employment
and teacher preparation influence. The lack of a
scientifically acceptable basis for using student achievement
as a rating for program performance, even if the cost and
burden were low, makes this indicator unreasonable. In
addition, evidence that ACT/SAT/GPA scores are a reliable
indicator of teacher effectiveness is equally questionable.
Capstone assessments, which are being implemented in very
limited ways are still inconclusive in their outcomes as
measuring teacher quality.
As stated earlier, the regulations represent a significant
financial burden to institutions, local school systems, and
states. In the state of Nebraska, there are over 500
individual teacher preparation `programs' subject to the
complexities of these regulations. Even as a system is
developed issues regarding privacy, low numbers, and student
demographics would impact results unfairly and result in
decisions unlikely to improve teacher preparation programs
and student learning at PK-12 schools.
The regulations focus on placement, retention, and
performance with PK-12 students has significant potential to
become a disincentive to encourage candidates to seek
placements in areas of high-need. This ideal conflicts with
our mission statement and preparation which seeks to lead
students to work with the underrepresented, disenfranchised,
and poor. Our teacher preparation candidates are well-
prepared, however, the potential of a teacher preparation
program being rated on test scores of high-needs students
will cause any institution pause. With lack of control of the
experience of the teachers once employed and no assurance of
resources to provide the supports for candidates in high-need
schools, it is unreasonable to compare these candidates with
candidates in non high-need situations.
The proposed timeline is unreasonable and unrealistic.
Those states piloting connecting teacher effectiveness to
student achievement are still under development and are
experiencing many ethical and legal challenges as they seek
to implement the requirements. Attaching outcomes to national
accreditation is also problematic in that the new CAEP
accreditation standards are not fully implemented and
accreditation processes using the new standards will not
officially be required until the Fall of 2016. The timeline
presented in the proposed regulations would include piloting
additional reporting requirements for the 2016-17 academic
year which is unrealistic to meet significantly increased
reporting elements, creation of new data systems, delivery of
in-service and technical assistance systems for institutions
and schools, and lack of new resources with which to
accomplish the unfunded mandates.
The proposed regulations do not consider or support the
philosophy that quality education requires a systemic
approach. Factors such as student demographics, preschool
learning opportunities, poverty and other social factors are
not controlled by PK-12 schools or teacher preparation
experiences. Other quality indicators such as equitable
funding, strong curriculum standards, focus on providing
opportunity--access--success for all students, and quality
assessment which all contribute to PK-12 student learning are
not controlled by teacher preparation programs. Therefore
equating PK-12 student performance to the quality of a
teacher preparation program is unfair and unreasonable.
However, dedication to strong commitments and collaborative
partnerships by educator preparation programs and school
systems impact the development of exemplary educators for the
future.
Thank you for allowing us to address our concerns. If you
have any questions, please feel free to contact us.
Sincerely,
Edward R. O'Connor,
PhD, FACHE,
Provost.
Debra L. Ponec,
EdD, NCC, Professor and Chair,
Education Department.
____
Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of
Nebraska, Lincoln, NE, January 29, 2015.
Re Comments Regarding Proposed Regulations, 34 CFR Parts 612
and 686; Teacher Preparation Issues.
Sophia McArdle,
U.S. Department of Education,
Washington, DC.
Dear Ms. McArdle: I am writing as the representative of the
private, non-profit, regionally accredited colleges and
universities in Nebraska with teacher education programs.
While we laud the US Department of Education in its efforts
to improve the quality of K-12 and higher education in the
United States, we believe there are portions of the proposed
regulation that are troubling to our institutions.
First, Nebraska is a state that prides itself on local
control in education matters. Despite the rhetoric about
allowing states to use their own measures of student growth,
this proposed regulation mandates states that do not already
use value-added measures of student learning in their teacher
assessments to do so. It provides for federally-mandated
state indicators of quality for teacher preparation program
assessments. This is a significant expansion of the federal
role in its oversight of the states' responsibility for the
education of its young people, and is inappropriate.
Second, the budgetary impact of this regulation is
significantly understated, if not laughable. No financial
support for states, school systems, or institutions of higher
education to implement the requirements is proposed. The
regulations create requirements for colleges, schools, and
states to track and report on candidates and teachers for
many years. Those systems are not in place. The cost
estimates make inaccurate assumptions that colleges and
states already have the systems in place for collecting,
analyzing, reporting, and utilizing data (federally-mandated
data which may or may not be valid or reliable for the
purposes for which it is intended to be used). It also
provides a timeline that is unworkable for most states and
institutions.
The January 2, 2015 letter from the American Council of
Education and twenty-three other association signatories to
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs points out
the significant understatement of OMB's estimate of the costs
of implementing the proposed regulation by states and IHE's.
Most of the teacher preparation programs that I represent are
very small, and the impact on them will be disproportionately
large from a cost standpoint. The Department cannot talk
about tuition containment from one side of its mouth and take
actions that will exacerbate tuition hikes out of the other
side.
Third, while teacher preparation is one factor in secondary
student performance, it is not the only factor. Demographics,
family income, school facilities, parental support, and other
non-preparation issues have impacts on student performance.
This proposed
[[Page S1666]]
regulation may have unintended consequences that the USDOE
should consider. Why would an IHE place a first-year student
in a ``troubled'' school district or building, where he or
she might be less likely to continue in a teaching career,
when a ``safer'' placement would make that continuance more
likely? Ergo, a higher rating for the IHE, the students in
the program would not be at risk to lose Title IV funds or
Teach Grants, and other positives for the college. On the
other hand, a school district or building might lose the
services of an outstanding first-year teacher which it really
needs.
Finally, attributing financial aid-eligibility on
institutional ratings based on research that may or may not
be valid is irresponsible and bad public policy. It will
hinder enrollment to students who could become outstanding
teachers, but may have to overcome hurdles in order to do so.
This regulation will give IHE's less incentive to enroll
those types of students.
For these reasons, we believe the proposed regulations
should be reconsidered and a new negotiated rulemaking
convened, with proposed regulations that take into account
the myriad of comments received by the USDOE from states,
institutions of higher education, and associations relating
to these proposed regulations. Thank you for your
consideration.
Sincerely,
Thomas O'Neill, Jr.,
President.
Comments submitted by Nebraskans:
--Malinda Eccarius, University of Nebraska, Lincoln on Apr.
27, 2016: https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=ED-2014-OPE-
0057-4855
_Debra Ponec, Creighton University on Feb. 4, 2015:
https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=ED-2014-OPE-0057-4364
_Lixin Ren, Doctoral Student, University of Nebraska-
Lincoln on Feb. 4, 2015: https://www.regulations.gov/
document?D=ED-2014-OPE-0057-4246
_Don Jackson, President of Hasting College on Feb. 4,
2015: https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=ED-2014-OPE-
0057-4231
_Thomas O'Neill, President of Association of Independent
Colleges and Universities of Nebraska on Feb. 4, 2015:
https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=ED-2014-OPE-0057-4541
_Sharon Katt, Matthew L. Blomstedt, and Scott Swisher of
Nebraska Department of Education on Feb. 4, 2015: https://
www.regulations.gov/document?D=ED-2014-OPE-0057-3887
_Marjorie Kostelnik, University of Nebraska, Lincoln on
Feb. 4, 2015: https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=ED-2014-
OPE-0057-3511
_Ronald Bork, Associate Dean, Head of Teacher Education at
Concordia University, Nebraska on Jan. 26, 2015: https://
www.regulations.gov/document?D=ED-2014-OPE-0057-1997
Mr. SASSE. Thank you, Mr. President.
I yield back.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, all time on the
joint resolution has expired.
The joint resolution was ordered to a third reading and was read the
third time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The joint resolution having been read the
third time, the question is, Shall the joint resolution pass?
Mr. SASSE. I ask for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There appears to be a sufficient second.
The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk called the roll.
Mr. CORNYN. The following Senator is necessarily absent: the Senator
from Georgia (Mr. Isakson).
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Toomey). Are there any other Senators in
the Chamber desiring to vote?
The result was announced--yeas 59, nays 40, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 83 Leg.]
YEAS--59
Alexander
Barrasso
Blunt
Boozman
Burr
Capito
Cassidy
Cochran
Collins
Corker
Cornyn
Cortez Masto
Cotton
Crapo
Cruz
Daines
Donnelly
Enzi
Ernst
Fischer
Flake
Gardner
Graham
Grassley
Hatch
Heitkamp
Heller
Hoeven
Inhofe
Johnson
Kennedy
King
Lankford
Lee
Manchin
McCain
McCaskill
McConnell
Moran
Murkowski
Nelson
Paul
Perdue
Portman
Risch
Roberts
Rounds
Rubio
Sasse
Scott
Shelby
Strange
Sullivan
Tester
Thune
Tillis
Toomey
Wicker
Young
NAYS--40
Baldwin
Bennet
Blumenthal
Booker
Brown
Cantwell
Cardin
Carper
Casey
Coons
Duckworth
Durbin
Feinstein
Franken
Gillibrand
Harris
Hassan
Heinrich
Hirono
Kaine
Klobuchar
Leahy
Markey
Menendez
Merkley
Murphy
Murray
Peters
Reed
Sanders
Schatz
Schumer
Shaheen
Stabenow
Udall
Van Hollen
Warner
Warren
Whitehouse
Wyden
NOT VOTING--1
Isakson
The joint resolution (H.J. Res. 58) was passed.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
____________________