[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 167 (Tuesday, October 17, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Page S6422]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTHCARE
Mr. SCHUMER. First, Mr. President, a brief word on healthcare.
Senators Alexander and Murray continue to negotiate a bipartisan
package of legislation to stabilize our healthcare markets and lower
premiums, a process that began over the summer. From what I have heard,
they are down to a few final issues and are hopefully close to an
agreement that can be taken back to both of our caucuses. Congress
ought to show, through the work started by Senators Alexander and
Murray way back in July, that Congress can work in a bipartisan way on
healthcare, and we have no intention of going along with President
Trump's reckless sabotage of the Nation's healthcare law.
Last week, President Trump showed that he is willing to take a
wrecking ball to our Nation's healthcare for the sake of politics
without any regard to the people it would hurt: veterans, senior
citizens, kids, and folks struggling to afford insurance. President
Trump was so angry they couldn't repeal and replace, he instead said: I
am going to wreck the system. The problem is, it hurts millions of
innocent people all for pique and politics. He has shown he is willing
to put at risk the healthcare of millions of Americans. President
Trump's decision to end the cost-sharing program was an act of
impulsive malice with no benefit and no end.
This seems to be his MO. He throws red meat to his rightwing base,
whether it is on healthcare, immigration, Iran, or disaster aid. Then
he says to Congress: You fix it up. That is not the way to lead. That
is following. That is an act that exhibits no strength--no strength.
We want our President to be a strong leader. Every American does,
regardless of ideology, but when the President plays so many political
games that are not just harmless but that hurt people and then says to
Congress to clean it up, blaming Congress for the mess he created, it
doesn't work, it is not fair, it is not right, and it is the reason
that, except for his base, President Trump's numbers keep sliding. They
are flat now, and they are down below 40 percent. No President has had
such low numbers. By the way, it is not helping the Republican Party.
Numbers today show a record difference between whether people prefer
Democrats or Republicans, so I would urge him to stop these harmful,
almost malicious shenanigans and let us all work together for the good
of our country.
On healthcare, we in Congress should continue to shore up the
healthcare markets and lower premiums in a bipartisan way. We ought to
reject the path of President Trump's sabotage and destruction and
instead view a path of consensus and compromise. That is the way it has
to go. No side wins everything they want. That is not how the Founding
Fathers set up this country, otherwise we would be a dictatorship or a
country without checks and balances. We ought to work together to
improve our healthcare system, to lower costs for people, and to ensure
that more people have access to health coverage. We Democrats have been
pushing that for several months now.
I salute Senators Alexander and Murray for understanding that. They
have been in careful negotiations that represent the best first step
forward on healthcare. I hope we hear more from them on the status of
negotiations. I hope they can come to an agreement that includes
curtailing the sabotage I spoke of that the President is doing. I hope
Leader McConnell and I can support this bill together, and then maybe
even the House might pass it. The President has said, I think--we don't
know, it changes from day to day--but I think the most recent
pronouncement is that he might sign it.
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