[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 106 (Wednesday, June 21, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H4998-H4999]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DO THE RIGHT THING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Hoyer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, when someone keeps something secret, it is
often because it is embarrassing or negative or damaging or
unsupportable.
Mr. Speaker, over in the Senate, Leader McConnell and some of these
Republican Senators are doing just that: crafting a healthcare repeal
bill in secret because they know what it contains would deeply
embarrass anyone who supports it openly.
They know it is going to be a hard sell to convince even their own
Republican colleagues, Mr. Speaker, to get behind a bill that even
President Trump called mean. That was the House American Health Care
Act to which he was referring. He called it mean for the harm it does
to Americans.
They know it is going to be difficult in the Senate to convince
Senators to support a bill that raises healthcare costs for working
families and kicks millions of Americans off their coverage, including
those who are covered by their employers; a bill that makes millions of
individuals with preexisting conditions uninsurable and reinstitutes
annual and lifetime limits; a bill that imposes an age tax on those
between ages 50 and 64, increasing premium costs by as much as 800
percent; a bill that forces States to cut benefits and kick millions of
people off Medicaid, whether it is next year, in 3 years, or in 7
years, those times that are to try to get by elections so that perhaps
people will not be held accountable for voting for such draconian
legislation.
Mr. Speaker, such a bill ought to be very embarrassing indeed, which
is why Senator McConnell, I believe, and his allies don't want anyone
to see it until they are asked to vote on it.
We have a similar problem, of course, in the House.
Whatever happened to transparency, to openness, to reading the bills,
to posting it for all to see in advance? Where are all those people who
wanted everybody to read the bills and see the bills? Where are they
today in demanding that bills be fully and thoroughly vetted, read,
heard, and voted on?
It is no wonder even Republican Senators who haven't seen the bill
are getting angry with their leader and those drafting it in secrecy.
Republican Senator Ron Johnson said last week, Mr. Speaker: ``I want
to know exactly what is going to be in the Senate bill. I don't know it
yet.'' And then he concluded: ``It is not a good process.''
And Senator Marco Rubio said: ``The Senate is not a place where you
can just cook up something behind closed doors and rush it for a
vote.''
But, Mr. Speaker, what we hear is exactly what is happening, cooking
it up in secret and rushing it for a vote.
Now, Mr. Speaker, they are not the only ones who want to know what is
in this bill. Millions of Americans are deeply worried about its
contents.
Last week, I sat down with two courageous Americans who shared their
personal healthcare stories with me. I want to thank them for doing so,
and I want to share their stories today. Their names are Ola Ojewumi
and Megan Foley.
Ola lives with a preexisting condition. As a young child, she
received a heart and kidney transplant. She is also a cancer survivor.
She is a young woman. She told me about how the Affordable Care Act
saved her life. She was able to access affordable coverage because of
the ban on denying coverage to those with preexisting conditions. Ola
also told me how frightened she is that these protections could be
taken away for her under the Senate's secret TrumpCare bill.
If it is enacted, Ola and others with preexisting conditions may not
be able to access the coverage needed to keep them alive and healthy,
or they may simply not be able to afford it.
When I spoke with Megan Foley, she shared her courageous story of
struggling with mental illness and addiction. She told me how she
overcame her addiction. Despite her recovery, before the Affordable
Care Act came into effect, she was denied coverage again and again
because her addiction was considered a preexisting condition. Those
were difficult months, cutting back on expenses and accruing debt just
to pay for her medication until the Affordable Care Act kicked in and
allowed for Megan to obtain coverage.
{time} 1015
But she made it, and now, the law protects Megan and millions and
millions of others like her struggling with addiction who were given a
second chance.
At a time when this country is plagued, Mr. Speaker, with an
unprecedented opioid addiction crisis, the Republican repeal bill is an
insult to courageous Americans for whom recovery is a lifelong process
and access to care is essential. They, and so many Americans, are now
living with uncertainty and fear for their future.
Mr. Speaker, I will be sharing my interviews with Ola and Megan on
social media, and I encourage all Members of this House to sit down
with their constituents and listen to their stories and hear about
their concerns.
Americans deserve to know what is in the Senate's secret TrumpCare
bill and how it would impact them and their loved ones. Americans
deserve to know. Senators who represent those Americans need to know,
and they have not seen it yet, yet there is some discussion that they
may have to consider the bill as early as next week. Senators and
Members of this House deserve to know.
End the secrecy. Pull back the curtain. Let us see what is in that
bill that these Senators think is so embarrassing that it must be
hidden from us all.
[[Page H4999]]
I will remind Republicans, both in the House and in the Senate, and
the Republican President in the White House, that their party's control
of our government is complete, and they will be held responsible for
whatever happens to our healthcare system on their watch.
CBO tells us that 23 to 24 million people, as a result of the House
bill, would lose their insurance; the preexisting conditions would be
put at risk; and over $800 billion would be cut from Medicare and
Medicaid.
Mr. Speaker, I urge all of us to listen to Americans, to hear how
beneficial the Affordable Care Act has been. I hope they will listen to
Ola. I hope they will listen to Megan and all those who are concerned
for the future and not huddle in a secret backroom making decisions
that will negatively impact millions and millions and millions of our
fellow citizens.
Do the right thing. Do it for Ola. Do it for Megan. Do it for all of
our citizens.
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