[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 161 (2015), Part 3]
[Senate]
[Page 3922]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                           A BALANCED BUDGET

  Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, we begin this week by remembering a 
failed idea from the past--ObamaCare--and we will end by passing 
balanced budget legislation about the future.
  Five years ago today, a partisan ObamaCare bill was signed into law 
over the objections of the American people. It was rushed through in 
defiance of the experts who warned it would result in higher costs, 
fewer choices, and broken promises for the middle class. And, 
tragically, that is just what we have seen.
  Millions of Americans lost health plans they were promised they could 
keep, premiums spiked, deductibles skyrocketed, tax time became even 
more of a burden, and often a costlier one as well, and for too many, 
family doctors and trusted hospitals fell out of network.
  All we have to do is listen to letters such as Karen's from 
Louisville to know that Americans deserve better than what ObamaCare 
has given them.
  Karen was paying $325 a month for her health insurance. But now, she 
says her premium has spiked to almost $550 a month with a deductible 
well in excess of $6,000. ``I cannot afford this,'' Karen wrote, ``but 
I do not have a choice. It scares me to think what will happen if I do 
get sick.''
  That is Karen's story, and it is hardly unique.
  Every Member in this body should be striving for something better--
something better--than the pain of ObamaCare. And we can. By passing a 
balanced budget that is about the future, we can leave ObamaCare's 
higher costs and broken promises where they belong--in the past--and 
start fresh with real health reform. That is just one of the many 
reasons for Senators who support the balanced budget now before us. It 
is a budget that recognizes serious fiscal and economic challenges that 
are facing our country and works to address them in a commonsense way.
  Americans know that Washington can't tax away the challenges 
confronting us, and Americans know Washington can't ignore away the 
problems confronting us, either. Americans also know that every dollar 
spent on interest for the growing national debt is essentially wasted. 
Every dollar spent on interest is one less dollar for Social Security 
or for helping those who truly need it or for tax relief.
  That is why the balanced budget before us is premised on a simple 
truth--that Washington has a spending problem, not a revenue problem. I 
know this can be hard for some to acknowledge, but politicians have a 
duty to the American people to simply admit it. They owe it to the 
American people to explain why the kind of budget blueprints we have 
seen from the White House are just so totally unserious. President 
Obama's budgets skip the tough choices, keep spending more money we 
don't have, contain massive tax increases, and never balance--ever. 
They never balance--ever.
  Contrast that to the budget before the Senate today. It balances, it 
does so without raising taxes, and it is the result of open and 
transparent committee work led by Chairman Mike Enzi.
  This budget is another example of the new Senate getting back to work 
for the American people. It is another example of the new Senate moving 
past failed ideas from the past, such as ObamaCare, and positioning 
America for the future instead.
  This balanced budget is all about growing an economy that can work 
better for the middle class of today and leaving a more prosperous 
future to the middle class of tomorrow. It will also provide the 
procedural tools, via the budget reconciliation process, to bring an 
end to the nightmare of ObamaCare. That is something all of us should 
want.
  So since our friends across the aisle have decided not to offer a 
budget of their own, I would invite them to join us--to join us in 
supporting the growth-oriented and balanced budget that is before us 
now.

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