[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 110 (Tuesday, June 27, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3795-S3796]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTHCARE LEGISLATION
Mr. COONS. Mr. President, I have come to the floor tonight to join my
colleagues in opposing the Senate healthcare reform bill, what I will
call the Senate TrumpCare bill. I am also here to thank the thousands
of my constituents, the thousands of Delawareans who called and emailed
my office to express their opposition to this bill that is about
neither health nor care. It is because of your efforts, because of the
efforts of thousands of Americans across the country who have made
their voices heard, that today the Senate doesn't have enough votes to
pass this TrumpCare bill.
I urge everyone watching and listening to remember that this fight is
not over. The Senate will be back next month, and Republicans will be
doing everything they can to make tweaks or shaves or changes or
amendments to the bill to get it past this body. We need the
engagement, the persistence, even the resistance of Delawareans and
Americans to make sure the Senate TrumpCare bill never becomes law.
This is as urgent now as ever because of how fundamentally heartless
this bill is. As many nonpartisan organizations, including the
Congressional Budget Office, have pointed out, this bill is essentially
a massive tax break for the wealthy paid for on the backs of some of
America's most vulnerable citizens.
Many of my colleagues have already discussed the devastating impact
this bill would have over time on millions of Americans. This Senate
bill would make hundreds of billions of dollars in cuts to Medicaid, it
would slash tax credits that help Americans buy health insurance, and
it would force 22 million Americans off their health insurance and
drive up costs for many millions more.
If that is not bad enough, the Senate TrumpCare bill does all of this
slashing and cutting in large part to give another tax break to our
wealthiest citizens. If this bill becomes law, the very richest
Americans would get an extra $700 billion in tax breaks over the next
decade.
If it only affected the millions of Americans who depend on Medicaid
or who purchase insurance on the individual market, it would be
unconscionable, but it is even worse. Let me explain.
Many of our constituents don't realize that even Americans who get
their health insurance through their employer--the 150 million
Americans who get their health insurance through their employer--have
benefited from the Affordable Care Act. In fact, I think that in some
ways, the consumer protections put in place by the ACA are the most
important accomplishment of that bill.
A core requirement of the ACA was that all health insurance plans
cover what are known as essential health benefits. These are basic
services, such as emergency care, prescription drugs, pediatric
services, maternity and newborn care, hospitalization, healthcare for
the mentally ill, and substance
[[Page S3796]]
abuse treatment for the addicted. To put it more succinctly, these are
all the reasons many people want health insurance in the first place.
Thanks to the ACA, almost every insurance plan in the country today has
to carry these core services, and that includes the more than 150
million Americans and the half a million Delawareans who get their
health insurance through their jobs.
The Senate TrumpCare bill would allow States, through waivers over
time, to gut these essential health benefit requirements, gradually
making many Americans' health insurance less and less valuable and less
and less protective of their and their families' health.
That provision of the Senate TrumpCare bill would also allow States
to waive the ban on insurers imposing annual and lifetime limits on
essential healthcare coverage. Even if you get good insurance through
your employer, if you have an unexpected development--let's say the
premature birth of a child, who develops serious medical challenges, or
a terrible diagnosis that requires expensive and repeated surgery--you
either have to come up with that money on your own or you are forced
into bankruptcy once you hit the lifetime cap.
Let me demonstrate with an all-too-real example. About 1 in 10
newborns has to spend time in the neonatal intensive care unit, or
NICU, after they are born. According to the American Medical
Association, in the NICU, ``it is not unusual for costs to top $1
million for an extended stay.'' That means even a baby born to parents
with great insurance coverage through their employer hit their lifetime
insurance cap before they even leave the hospital for the first time.
As Americans are scrambling to find ways to pay for their
astronomical out-of-pocket costs under the so-called Senate TrumpCare
bill, wealthier Americans and corporations will be given big tax
breaks.
Moreover, while Senate Republicans may claim their bill still covers
preexisting conditions, insurance under this bill would be rendered
meaningless if it doesn't cover what you need to treat your preexisting
condition through these essential health benefits.
Let's briefly recap this Senate TrumpCare bill. Millions of Americans
lose health insurance. Those who managed to keep it end up paying more
but get less coverage. The wealthiest Americans get another big tax
break. That is a painful, even cynical, political calculation.
Since I came to the Senate 7 years ago, I have said more times than I
can count that I want to work with Republicans to fix the parts of the
Affordable Care Act that need fixing. Let's simplify the reporting
requirements that burden small businesses and increase the tax credits
that help small business employers offer insurance to their employees.
Let's find ways together to increase competition and expand the tax
credits to bring down premiums and deductibles on the individual
market. Let's explore new mechanisms that control healthcare costs by
incentivizing reforms and producing healthier outcomes, rather than
more tests and services. Sadly, this Senate TrumpCare bill does none of
these things.
It is my hope that after today's developments, that after the next
few weeks, that after hearing from their constituents and returning in
the next month, that my colleagues will recognize that if we work
together, we can address the broken parts of the ACA and sustain the
best of what it has done to expand insurance and healthcare for
millions of Americans.
Let me close with a story I shared earlier today on the steps of the
Capitol. This is Kerry Orr. Kerry is from my hometown of Wilmington,
DE. Kerry is a massage therapist and self-employed yoga instructor.
Like many Americans, she considers the Affordable Care Act ``nothing
short of miraculous.''
Kerry signed up for health insurance in 2014, thanks to a subsidy
that made it available to her through the ACA. She had some nagging
abdominal and lower back pain for years but didn't think much of it,
considering she had no family history of disease and had never even had
stitches before. But that next year, in January of 2015, a routine
procedure covered by her new insurance--which she told me she wouldn't
have even gone for if it hadn't been covered by this new health
insurance--revealed that Kerry, in fact, had stage III colon cancer.
She had surgery a week later. She had 6 months of chemotherapy, and she
ultimately faced no out-of-pocket expenses and is fully in remission.
Kerry's cancer has now been in remission since September 2015.
She wrote to me earlier this year:
The ACA came along at the last possible moment to save my
life. I am certain that without it, I would have continued to
live with the discomfort and try to self-treat until the
cancer was too advanced to be successfully treated.
I am opposing the Senate TrumpCare bill for Kerry and for the
thousands of Delawareans and millions of Americans just like her. I
have heard stories from Delawareans about things that need to be fixed
in the Affordable Care Act, and I hope I get a chance to work across
the aisle to do that, but I have also heard from hundreds of
Delawareans whose lives have been improved or, in cases just like
Kerry's, saved by the Affordable Care Act. I will not yield on
defending the best parts of the ACA that have saved the lives of
Americans across this country.
In the days and the weeks to come, I hope all Americans will stay
active, stay engaged, and stay the course so that we can push aside
this cruel, cynical bill and find an opportunity to work together on a
bill with real heart. That fight is not yet over, and I will not yet
yield.
Thank you, Mr. President.
I yield the floor.
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