[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 110 (Tuesday, June 27, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H5187]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRUMPCARE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. JACKSON LEE. Mr. Speaker, I want to speak about a young man by
the name of Will, who is 34 years old and tells us a story that, if he
was a Canadian, there would be a good chance that he could live 17 more
years. He has cystic fibrosis, and I imagine there are many families
with children who have that, but he is concerned about TrumpCare and
the impact.
At age 2, he was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis, a hereditary disease
impacting 30,000 Americans. He says:
Imagine being under water and coming up for air, but
instead of breathing, you uncontrollably cough that air out.
The harder you try to breathe, the more you cough. At its
worst, this disease feels like a long, drawn-out panic attack
set to the soundtrack of an endless hacking cough. At 34,
statistically, I have 7 more years left before my lungs cease
to function.
He mentions that if he were in Canada, statistically, he would have
17 more years because of the healthcare, but he also says this is not
an exaggeration:
The cold data from a recent study by the U.S. Cystic
Fibrosis Foundation, the conclusion is that Canada's
nationalized single-payer healthcare system that guarantees
health insurance for everyone is the primary reason why
Canadians with my disease will live longer.
But look what happened to him:
For the past 4 years, however, my disease has gone into
reverse. I have been gradually getting better. It is an
extraordinary sensation. A new medication called Kalydeco
made by a company in Boston has given me the promise of
extending both the length and quality of my life. I have been
healthy enough to work abroad as a freelance journalist.
A year and a half ago, Will got married.
My wife and I hope to one day have kids, but today is a
sobering day. The House Republicans replaced the Affordable
Care Act, and if the Senate bill goes through, a plan that
likely won't allow me to remain on this drug, then my long-
term plans go out the window. I have a preexisting condition.
My outlook would likely regress back to the one of short-term
survival and carpe diem. That is a very different future than
the one I plan to have.
That is what TrumpCare represents to millions of Americans: higher
costs; less coverage; not 22 million now, but in 2026, 49 million
Americans will not be insured.
How can you? Where is the moral standing?
It guts protections for preexisting conditions no matter what kind of
smoke and mirrors the Senate is trying to tell us. It does not exist.
It has got a crushing age tax. If you are over 50, more of your
income will be used for your insurance premiums, up to $12,000 to
$15,000.
And it steals from Medicare. It makes the Medicare trust fund
insolvent.
In my own State of Texas, here is a long chart that talks to each
Member, including my colleagues on the other side of the aisle, how
many people in their district will lose their health insurance.
I would ask the question: Is there any mercy? Is there anyone that
understands?
In my district alone, almost 100,000--89,000--individuals will be
losing their insurance; almost 20,000 of those will be children. And it
goes on in other Members' districts, talks about children: 7,000,
9,000, 8,000, 15,000, 13,000, 12,000, 10,000, 14,000, 18,000, 16,000
children in different districts in the State of Texas will lose their
insurance.
And then Will, who would have and has now, because of the Affordable
Care Act, a decent life, with a preexisting condition that he
described, how would you like to come from under water and try to
breathe and that breathing is undermined by the hacking of that cough?
I hope that this bill is derailed. I hope that TrumpCare in the House
and the Senate never sees the light of day, not because I don't want to
work with my colleagues, but because the chronically ill will suffer
and many will die. The statistics show that in the State of Texas, Mr.
Speaker.
I conclude with this one sentence, Mr. Speaker. I want to go back to
Mr. Clay, and I ask the Attorney General to investigate the shooting of
Mr. Castile, and to do it now.
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