Recent Press Releases

‘We should not be rushed into enacting so-called ‘reforms’ that cost taxpayers trillions and could increase premiums to consumers’

WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Thursday regarding the importance of getting it right on health care reform:

“Americans want health care reform. This isn’t in dispute. People are frustrated with the high cost of care and many are worried about losing the health care coverage they have. Some can’t afford care, or have to choose between basic necessities and the treatments they need. These are some of the things that are wrong with the current system, and they need to be fixed.

“But while all of us recognize that serious reform is needed, we should also recognize the necessity of getting it right. And before we rush to pass just anything in the name of reform, such as the bill introduced in the HELP Committee this week, Americans have a right to ask some basic questions, questions like, ‘How much will it cost?’, ‘How will we pay for it?’ And, ‘What will this mean for me and my family?’

“As to the first question, Americans have good reason to be concerned about what this bill would cost. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that just a portion of the HELP Committee bill would spend $1.3 trillion over ten years. And that doesn’t even include major portions of the final proposal, including a massive expansion of Medicaid that will cost untold billions of dollars.

“These are staggering amounts of money for taxpayers to contemplate, which is why it’s troubling to a lot of people when we see committee members in such a rush to pass this legislation before the Congressional Budget Office even has a chance to fully estimate its cost. On something as important to the American people as health care reform, cost and effectiveness should be a higher priority than speed.

“But even if we did decide this bill was the right reform, another question arises: ‘How would we pay for it?’ Most people don’t walk out onto a car lot, pick out the most expensive model, buy it, and then figure out how they’re going to pay for it. Even if they wanted to, the car salesman wouldn’t let them. We need to take the same approach here.

“Well, the proposal we’ve seen is full of creative new ways to spend taxpayer dollars. But it offers little in the way of offsetting the cost of the overall bill. We’d have to either charge the money to the national credit card or, more likely, raise taxes on working families. In other words, more spending, higher taxes, and even more debt. So far, some of the taxes under discussion include a new tax on soda and juice boxes, the creation of a new tax on jobs, and new limits on charitable deductions. But this would just be the beginning.

“The HELP Committee bill would be hugely expensive by any reckoning, and no one has a plan to pay for it. This isn’t a very good start as far as health care reform is concerned.

“Americans are also right to wonder how these changes would affect the family budget. Will the HELP committee’s so-called ‘reforms’ raise the health insurance costs for millions of families and businesses at a time when they are already struggling?

“This isn’t a scare tactic or a theoretical question. Not only does the CBO estimate suggest that the final bill is far too expensive, but we also have the example of states that have tried some of the proposals it suggests. Shouldn’t we look at the experience of these states to determine whether we want to replicate these proposals nationwide?

“Take Kentucky, for example. Many of the same concepts embraced by the HELP Committee bill were tried 15 years ago in Kentucky … with disastrous results. Instead of the reforms they were promised, Kentuckians were left with higher expenses and fewer choices for health coverage. Instead of more affordable care, one report estimates that 850,000 Kentuckians faced dramatically higher premiums.

“Instead of increased competition, about 50 insurance companies stopped offering individual insurance – leaving only a handful of private insurers and a government-run plan that wasn’t affordable for taxpayers. After years of failure, many of these so-called reforms were repealed, but not without significant damage to the Commonwealth. While the market has rebounded some, Kentucky’s small businesses and families tell me that a lack of competition in the health care market continues to keep prices high. Shouldn’t this experience figure into our consideration?

“When it comes to our approach on legislation as costly as health care, we should learn from our experience with the Stimulus. Democrats rushed that bill on the grounds that we needed it to jumpstart the ailing economy. Yet a few months later, we’re already hearing outrageous stories of abuse and the unemployment rate continues to rise.

“And, when it comes to specific proposals within any so-called health care reform bill, we should learn from the experience of Kentucky. We should not be rushed into enacting so-called ‘reforms’ that cost taxpayers trillions and could increase premiums to consumers.

“Americans want reform. But they want us to do it right — they don’t want a blind rush to spend trillions of dollars that they and their grandchildren will have to pay for through higher taxes and even more debt.”

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‘The administration admits it made a mistake on its predictions about the stimulus. We shouldn’t make the same mistake again when it comes to health’

WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Wednesday regarding the importance of getting it right on health care reform:

“Earlier this year, the new administration proposed and Democrats in Congress approved an economic stimulus bill that was meant to lift the economy at a time of massive job losses and widespread economic hardship.

“Not only was the bill enormously complex, it was also one of the costliest pieces of legislation ever proposed.

“And yet those who put it together insisted that it be rushed to a vote.

“Their reason: the economic downturn was just too dire to wait. ‘Trust us,’ they said. ‘It’s responsible; it’s needed; and it will work.’

“And so this incredibly complex, enormously expensive bill, which was introduced on January 26th — was passed less than three weeks later — just 24 hours — 24 hours — after all of its details had been disclosed to the public for review.

“At the time, I argued that spending this much borrowed money in the middle of a recession on a bill that had been rushed to the floor was extremely irresponsible. At a time when millions were struggling just to make ends meet, Washington had no business borrowing hundreds of billions of dollars to pay for government golf carts and ATV trails in the name of economic stimulus. This week, Senator Coburn has catalogued some of the other outrages that are contained in this bill.

“Here are just a few:

“The town of Union, New York, received a $578,000 grant that it didn’t request for a homelessness problem it claims it does not have.

“Florida is planning to spend $3.4 million in stimulus money to build a 13 foot turtle tunnel at Lake Jackson. That’s more than $250,000 per foot.

“And — this one takes the cake — in North Carolina, $40,234 in federal stimulus money will pay for the salary of someone whose job is to lobby … for more stimulus funds … $40,234 just to pay someone to lobby for more stimulus money.

“This would be comical if it weren’t so maddening, and if these projects hadn’t been sold to the American people as the answer to our economic problems, and if the administration hadn’t assured us that it would make sure every cent of this money was spent efficiently and without waste.

“But that was then.

“The administration had promised since January that it would keep an eye on how precious tax dollars were spent. But just months after the stimulus was signed into law it was already admitting that funds would be wasted and that people were being scammed.

“In January and February, administration economists took to the talk shows promising that the Stimulus would create three million to four millions jobs. They said that if we passed the stimulus, the unemployment rate would now be about eight percent.

“But just a few months later, with job losses continuing to mount, the administration admits that their earlier predictions were a guess — and that they guessed wrong.

“Today, the unemployment rate stands at 9.4 percent, and just yesterday the administration said it expects unemployment to climb even higher.

“A trillion dollars that they said was absolutely necessary to jumpstart the economy, and which was put on a fast-track by an eager to please Democratic-led Congress, is now being called a bad guess by the very people who proposed it. And now they’re asking us to do it again.

“Only this time it’s even more than $1 trillion, and the consequences could be far worse. The early estimates we’re getting for the health care proposal we’ve seen is that just a portion of it will spend $1.3 trillion.

“This figure, staggering in itself, doesn’t even account for the money that would be needed to pay for expanding Medicaid and creating a new government-run plan.

“And no one can tell us where any of this money will come from.

“Yet, just like the stimulus, we’re being told in the most urgent tones that this government takeover of health care is absolutely necessary, and that we have to approve it as soon as possible — without review, without knowing the full cost, and without knowing how it will affect people's lives.

“Once again, it’s rush and spend, and rush and spend — and a tidal wave of debt.

“Everyone in America knows that health care reform is needed in this country. But they want us to do it right — they don’t want a blind rush to spend trillions of dollars in the hope the administration gets it right.

“During the debate over the stimulus, we were told that we had to pass it right away, with just 24 hours review — or $42 billion an hour, for the sake of the economy.

“Now we’re being told we need to approve a particular set of health care reforms …. for the sake of the economy. But we have no bill. We have no idea of its total cost. And yet it’s rush, rush, rush.

“We’ve heard all this before. We’ve made this mistake already. Americans won’t be rushed into another one.

“Americans want health care reform. But they want the right reform — not a government takeover disguised as a reform that takes away the care they have, replaces it with something worse, and costs untold trillions that they and their grandchildren will have to pay for through higher taxes and even more debt.

“The administration admits it made a mistake on its predictions about the stimulus. We shouldn’t make the same mistake again when it comes to health care.”

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‘The bottom line is this: Under the illusion of reform, Americans will be asked to give up the care they like for something worse, and then they’ll be taxed to the hilt to pay for it’

WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Tuesday regarding the importance of getting it right on health care reform:

“The health care system in this country is in urgent need of reform. People are frustrated with the soaring cost of care, and they’re frustrated that so many of their fellow Americans lack the coverage that they need and that they should be able to expect in a nation as prosperous as ours. People are also worried about the enormous burden that rising health care costs are placing on American businesses, which are being forced to put off pay increases and lay off workers to cope with rising insurance premiums. And now people are concerned that a new government health plan that’s being talked about will make all of these problems even worse.

“For weeks, many of us have been warning about plans for a government takeover of health care along the lines of the takeovers we’ve seen in other areas of the private sector. Now the details of those plans are coming to light, and they raise two questions: How much is all this going to cost, and how are we going to pay for it?

“Let’s take just three proposals in the plan that’s currently taking shape over in the Health Education Labor and Pensions Committee, the details of which are just beginning to emerge.

“First, there’s a massive expansion of Medicaid. Here’s a program that was originally established as a partnership between the federal government and the states to assist the poor and disabled and which has become fiscally unsustainable. Yet rather than reform this broken program, the HELP Committee is proposing a massive new expansion instead.

“Second, the HELP Committee bill includes massive new subsidies for Americans with incomes higher than $100,000. The purpose of these subsidies is to help defray the cost of rising insurance premiums. Well, we all know that health insurance is too expensive. But we ought to be working to lower those premiums, not opening up the federal checkbook to drive them up even higher.

“Third, the HELP Committee bill establishes a new so-called Prevention and Public Health Investment Fund. The details of this fund are a little murky, but early indications are that it will direct billions of dollars to things like having the government build sidewalks and government-subsidized farmers markets.

“The idea here is to use tax dollars to encourage healthier lifestyles. But at a time when Americans are buried under medical bills and frightened about losing the coverage they have, farmers markets and sidewalks aren’t the reforms they have in mind.

“Americans want serious health care reform — not expansions of programs that are already fiscally unsustainable; subsidies that disguise rising costs instead of addressing their causes; and billions for sidewalks and asparagus. These are precisely the kinds of proposals that mask the underlying problems and cause people to lose faith in government solutions. And they’re not acceptable.

“The details we’re seeing from the HELP Committee should make us more skeptical of a government health plan — not less. And they should underscore for every American the need for the kind of real, comprehensive reforms some of us have been calling for over the past few weeks.

“The irony in this whole debate is that we’re being told America’s fiscal future will be jeopardized if we don’t allow the same people who are proposing these outrageous so-called ‘reforms’ to take over the entire health care system.

“Preliminary estimates for this flawed legislative proposal are staggering. Just yesterday, the Congressional Budget Office released an estimate of just part of the HELP Committee bill. Focusing on just this one section, the CBO determined the bill will spend $1.3 trillion over 10 years, even though 37 million people would still be left without health insurance.

“And this isn’t even a complete evaluation of the bill. Large proposals that will have a significant impact on the cost such as a Medicaid expansion and a government run plan have not even been factored in. Moreover, according to the details of this HELP Committee plan, a newly-created health care exchange would result in 15 million Americans losing the employer coverage they currently have — further evidence that if you like what you have, you may well lose it under a government-run plan.

“How does the HELP Committee propose we pay for all this?

“Well, its proposal is full of creative new ways to spend taxpayer dollars, but it offers little in the way of offsetting the cost of the overall bill. They will either charge the money to the national credit card or, more likely, raise taxes on working families. In other words, more spending, higher taxes, and even more debt. So far, some of the taxes under discussion include a new tax on soda, juice boxes, the creation of a new tax on jobs, and new limits on charitable deductions.

“Based on the CBO estimate, these taxes would be just the beginning. The health care proposal being put together is not only extremely defective, it will cost a fortune. And that cost will come straight out of the taxpayer’s pocketbook.

“The bottom line is this: Under the illusion of reform, Americans will be asked to give up the care they like for something worse, and then they’ll be taxed to the hilt to pay for it. Americans don’t want changes that make the entire health care system as unsustainable as Medicaid — and they don’t want to go broke covering the cost.”

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