Idaho Rep. Mike Simpson speaks out on health care bill
Instead, Simpson said, it's the first step in a long process he contends is needed to get to a bipartisan solution to fix the nation's health care system.
"There has never been a major American program -- except Obamacare -- that has passed on a partisan vote," said Simpson, who represents
He expressed regret that
"This is something that some of us warned leadership about," Simpson said. "We're trying to do this all on our own. We ought to ignore whether we're
That comment was greeted by loud applause.
"It was interesting presiding over the debate," Simpson told about 275 health care stakeholders, including physicians, educators, CEOs and company human resource directors on Monday morning. "If you listened to
Simpson said in his view, the Affordable Care Act signed by President
"
The Idaho Healthcare Summit was organized by the
"The whole idea is what can we do while we're waiting for the government to do whatever it's going to do," said
Simpson, the summit's first speaker, who took questions from the audience, was pressed on his support for the just-passed House bill.
"If I thought it was going to be the bill that became law, I would've voted against it," he said. "Because there are some problems with it. I would be the first to admit it."
But Simpson said his many years in
He said some
"While there are provisions in the health care bill that passed the House that I thought should have been stronger, some of them probably shouldn't have been there -- the
"Those are the extremes. The question is can the majority of us in the middle solve this problem? I think we can."
Simpson, a dentist, recalled that when he first started practicing years ago in southern
"That doesn't happen anymore," he said. "Now everybody's on insurance, and it doesn't make that much difference to their pocketbook whether they go to someone who charges
He said
"That's called capitalism," he said. "And then let individuals decide what coverage suits their needs, not the government deciding what you need for insurance -- letting individuals decide what they need for their health care coverage. That's called freedom.
"And realizing that no matter how low you drive health care costs, no matter how much you reduce it, there will still be people who cannot afford it, that are going to need assistance. That's called compassion."
Simpson said the
He isn't sure the House-passed bill would work, but he stressed: "
Next, he said, the
Responding to questions about projections that millions of Americans would lose health coverage under the House bill, Simpson said that's in part because
"We couldn't do the entire replacement that we want to do with reconciliation. Which creates some problems," including unfavorable scoring by the
"We need to try to cover as many people in the country as we can that want health care coverage," Simpson said, saying there always will be some who won't want it. "It's hard to convince young people that you too can get in a motorcycle accident," he said. "But part of it is getting the cost down to where people can afford it, which is what we're trying to do."
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