[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 107 (Thursday, June 22, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3737-S3739]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTHCARE LEGISLATION
Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, it has been a rough day at the office for
the Senate Republican healthcare plan, and my take is that it is going
to be even tougher over the next few days. There will be a lot of
Senate Democrats home, meeting with folks in open meetings. We will see
if any Senate Republicans have the courage to do that as well.
Earlier this morning, the whole Senate had its first opportunity to
look at this bill in the light of day. The debate that unfolded on the
floor made it clear that our colleagues are committed to a partisan
scheme to jam this bill through at any cost. There isn't going to be a
full debate. There isn't going to be any bipartisan input.
If you read through the fine print in this destructive proposal, as
the American people have had the chance to do over the last several
hours, it becomes clear why my colleagues on the other side have kept
this bill hidden and want to jam it through as quickly as possible.
This proposal is stunning in its sameness to the cruel House bill
that the American people have rejected outright--in fact, rejected,
according to polls, by really eye-popping numbers. So I want to begin
by warning against anybody's buying into the sales job that is
inevitably going to unfold in the days ahead. This bill may change, but
Senate Republicans will only be putting lipstick on a devastating blow
to the healthcare of the American people.
This is a plan to raise costs, slash Medicaid, and cut millions of
people off of their healthcare to pay for tax breaks for the fortunate
few.
My colleagues on the other side have spent the last month telling
every reporter and constituent who would listen that they were throwing
out the House bill and they would be starting anew with a fresher and
kinder bill. That has turned out to be fiction. Republicans are going
to keep telling Americans that they are fixing their healthcare right
up until the second it gets taken away.
This bill doubles down on the meanness that even the President
described in the bill from the other body. The Senate Republican plan
doesn't fix the problems with people's healthcare. It creates a bunch
of new ones.
After a day of pouring over this bill--and the Finance Committee
Democratic staff has been looking at this in detail--I would like to
lay out, as we close up this afternoon, some of the most devastating
effects this bill will have.
First, Senate Republicans are so committed to slashing Medicaid that
their bill cuts it even deeper than the House. Today, Medicaid comes
with a guarantee to the most vulnerable Americans and their families
who walk an economic tightrope every day. Today, if you get sick or
suffer an injury, you will get the care you need. The Senate Republican
plan ends that guarantee for good. It ends the Medicaid program as our
country knows it for good.
People shouldn't be distracted by date changes or sweeteners for
people already enrolled. This is a radical plan plucked from the wish
list of the far right, and it is cloaked in the complicated language of
inflation rates and dollar figures. When you talk about slashing
Medicaid by hundreds of billions of dollars, you are not simply talking
about the lingo of healthcare policymakers, like bending the cost
curve. You are talking about people's lives.
Medicaid helps to pick up the bill for two out of three seniors in
America's nursing homes. These are the people who have done everything
right. They are our older parents, our grandmothers, our grandfathers.
They scrimped, they saved, and they worked hard. But it is pretty
clear: It is really expensive to grow old in America. So Medicaid is
there to support them and cover the cost of nursing home care when
savings run out.
The Senate Republican plan slashes Medicaid so deeply that States are
going to be forced to cut benefits, and the guarantee of nursing home
care will be in danger. This is one of the greatest threats seniors
have ever faced, and it is being imposed on them by an act of Congress.
I don't make that statement lightly. My background is working with
the older people of Oregon and our country. I was director of the
Oregon Gray Panthers for 7 years and ran the legal aid office for the
elderly before I was elected to Congress. I will say point-blank,
having worked in this field now for more than three decades, that this
is an extraordinary threat to the well-being of the Nation's older
people, who shouldn't have to worry about winding up living in squalor
or on the street.
Families shouldn't have to worry about where they will find the money
[[Page S3738]]
to cover the cost of a nursing home. That is $90,000 a year--$90,000 a
year, on average, for nursing home care. Independence, safety, and a
reasonably comfortable old age should not become a privilege reserved
just for the wealthy in our country.
Second, the age tax in the Senate Republican bill is going to hit
older Americans between 55 and 64 like a wrecking ball. They are going
to be forced to pay several times as much as a younger person for
health insurance. You are going to see older people desperately hoping
and praying that they can hold on to their health until they make it to
65 and enroll in Medicare. I would like to hear somebody try to explain
what healthcare problem that is fixing or why it is a good approach to
healthcare policy.
Third, Senate Republicans have now cooked up a scheme to decimate the
value of middle-class tax cuts for healthcare and send deductibles into
the stratosphere. Here is how that is going to work. A whole lot of
families in the middle class are going to lose their tax benefits
outright.
As the ranking member on the Senate Finance Committee that has
jurisdiction over tax policy, I have seen that. Then, as if that is not
enough harm, this plan cheapens the value of the tax benefits that were
created under the Affordable Care Act. It is a scheme to force people
into bargain basement insurance plans with sky-high deductibles. It
also risks kicking off a death spiral in States where the private
insurance markets are stable and competitive today.
Fourth, Republicans have twisted a part of the Affordable Care Act I
wrote to promote State innovation, and they are using it to give
insurance companies the power to run roughshod over individual
Americans. What we are talking about here is what are called section
1332 waivers. What was done in 2009, in the Senate Finance Committee--
it came out of my original bipartisan bill, the Healthy Americans Act--
we told States that the Affordable Care Act was going to set a new bar
for insurance in terms of coverage and affordability. We said to the
States--the laboratories of democracy--if you believe you can do even
better, you can get a waiver so you can go test an innovative, new
approach. We did build in protections, basic protections, so people
would get decent coverage, and their lives would be protected.
The Republican plan wipes those protections out, wipes out the
consumer protections. It tells States: OK. If you want to do worse, go
right ahead. In fact, the Senate Republican plan offers States a bribe
to end basic health protections and lower the bar for insurance. You
will see insurance companies given a green light to cut essential
benefits out of the plans they sell on the open market.
For example, take maternity care. The Affordable Care Act banned the
practice of price-gouging women just because of their gender, but the
Republican plan takes the side of the big insurance companies in this
debate.
On a fundamental level, this plan says that health insurance in
America ought to be based on what men need and what women need ought to
cost extra. Services like maternity care would be an add-on item, and
that means women are going to face higher costs just because they are
women.
Fifth, this proposal attacks Planned Parenthood and deprives hundreds
of thousands of women of the right to see the doctor of their choosing.
I want to come back to what that really means. Women in America ought
to be able to see the doctor of their choice, the doctor they trust,
the doctor, in their own judgment, is the best doctor for them. This
provision keeps them from doing that. Never mind that there is already
an air-tight ban on taxpayer dollars funding abortions. Never mind that
Planned Parenthood doesn't get a single dime of Federal funding above
what is available to other Medicaid providers. Never mind that Planned
Parenthood is where millions of women get routine medical care from
doctors they know and trust--services such as basic checkups, cancer
screenings, preventive care, HIV tests. The Senate Republican bill
continues this ideological crusade against Planned Parenthood, and it
is going to cost women across this country the right that I see as so
fundamental--the right of women to be able to choose to go to the
doctor they trust.
Sixth, at a time when the opioid epidemic is ripping apart
communities from one corner of this Nation to another, this bill would
be a devastating setback in the fight against opioid abuse. No
community has been spared from this crisis, and I would wager that
virtually every Senator has come to the floor at some point and spoken
about the impact it has had on their State.
By the way, it would be hard to forget the parade of Presidential
candidates in 2015 and 2016 that went through State after State
claiming they had the very best plan to end the opioid crisis, but now
the Senate Republican healthcare bill makes the crisis worse.
Medicaid is the only lifeline that thousands and thousands of people
across America have in their struggle to try to put their lives back
together after falling victim to opioids. For thousands and thousands
of people, over the last few years, the treatment they have gotten
through Medicaid has been their escape, their path out of a downward
spiral that too often leads to heroin abuse and overdose deaths. The
Republican plan takes this lifeline away.
Some on the other side have proposed creating a separate pool of
money, a separate slush fund to replace the loss of treatment through
Medicaid. In my view, this is a very serious mistake because it is
based on a complete misunderstanding of the opioid crisis, and it is
not going to work.
The opioid epidemic is a public health crisis, and fighting it means
making sure people can get the healthcare they need. That means
treating substance abuse disorders the same way you treat other
diseases. Our country doesn't pay for heart surgery through grant
programs. We don't pay for chemotherapy through congressional
appropriations. If you are sick and you have healthcare coverage, you
get the care you need. Anything less when it comes to opioid addiction
treatment is going to fail.
Finally, when you listen to that parade of horribles--all the harm
this bill is going to do to generations of Americans across the
country--you have to wonder why my colleagues on the other side would
push this bill forward.
People have been asking me this all day. There is a simple answer for
it. This bill takes healthcare away from millions of Americans and
raises costs for millions more for one reason--to give tax breaks to
the fortunate few in America. This isn't a debate about two competing
visions of healthcare--one liberal and one conservative. One side in
this debate wants to protect Americans' healthcare coverage, make sure
they can go to the doctors they trust and afford the medical care they
need. The other side in this debate has a plan to take away healthcare
coverage and raise the cost of care for the vulnerable, the middle
class, families struggling to get by--all to pay for tax breaks for the
wealthiest few. This is an out-and-out attack on millions of Americans'
health and well-being.
In the debate that played out on the Senate floor this morning, it
was suggested several times that Democrats turned down a chance to
participate in the process. This is completely, entirely 100 percent
false.
I am the ranking member of the committee that is responsible for
healthcare. I have not once been asked by a single Republican to work
on this bill or discuss fixes to the Affordable Care Act. I was stunned
this morning when I heard the Democrats had been given an offer to work
on these fixes; that Democrats aren't interested in being bipartisan.
I have made the center of my time in public service working in a
bipartisan way on healthcare. I have written healthcare legislation
that has been signed into law that has been bipartisan. It was based on
principles that both sides of the aisle could agree on. Certainly, if
there had been any interest in a process that would actually give both
sides the opportunity to do the kind of give-and-take that you do with
a bill--not through this partisan ``my way or the highway''
reconciliation--I would have been very interested in it, and I know
Senate Finance Democrats would have been very interested in it. That
wasn't on offer. The claim the Democrats have refused to
[[Page S3739]]
work in a bipartisan way is fiction, a gross fiction.
It is clear now that the only way to bring this partisan process to a
halt is for Americans to stand up and speak out. I am going to close
with two points. Ever since those Gray Panther days, I have always
thought healthcare was the most important issue because if Americans
and their loved ones don't have their health, then pretty much
everything goes by the board. You can't go to the game. You can't spend
time with family. It is hard to do much of anything.
It is very clear that healthcare, as a result of this proposal for
millions of Americans and for our country, is going to be at risk. What
is at risk is the prospect that the Senate will turn back the clock to
the days when healthcare was basically for the healthy and wealthy. We
shouldn't go there.
In the past, Democrats and Republicans have agreed we shouldn't go
there. With the bill I wrote--seven Democratic Senators, seven
Republican Senators--that was the centerpiece of it. By the way,
several Senate Republicans who are here in this body were cosponsors of
that legislation. We shouldn't go back to those days when healthcare
was basically for the healthy and wealthy.
For all those who are paying attention to these proceedings, my view
is, the only way you are going to end a partisan process and make
policy the way it ought to be made is not through something Washington
lingo calls reconciliation--it is just partisan--but through the give-
and-take of Democrats and Republicans finding good ideas that the other
side can agree on. The only way we are going to do that is for
Americans to stand up and speak out.
Political change does not start in government buildings and then
trickle down to the people. It is not trickle-down. It is almost always
bottom-up, starting from communities where we are going to hear people
speaking out over the next few days.
I am going to close by way of saying that over the next few days,
this is one of the most important times for Americans to make their
voices heard. As we wrap up the first day of actually seeing what the
draft Republican proposal is all about, I hope Americans will weigh in,
that we will see that grassroots juggernaut develop, and we will defeat
a partisan plan and set about the task of doing healthcare policy again
in a bipartisan way--where you find common ground that is sustainable
rather than just a partisan approach, which continues the gridlock and
the polarization on an issue that is the most important issue of our
time.
I yield the floor. I believe there are no other speakers.
____________________