Wyden Statement on Senate Floor on the Consequences of Trumpcare
The American public has spent the last several weeks hearing that the
If news reports are to be believed - and they're all there is to go on at this point - a vote on this massive proposal affecting the lives of just about everybody in the country is just days away. But nobody outside of a group of 13 men, all
It is time for Americans to get loud -- to do their part and make their voices heard. If and when this legislation hits the floor, the debate's going to be quick. By the standards of this body, it'll be over in a flash. So this afternoon I want to be very direct with a few key points for people to remember over the next two weeks.
First, the Republican health care plan is going to raise costs for typical Americans.
If you're an older Americans nearing retirement, 55 or 60 years old, you are going to get hit with an age tax. You're going to be forced to pay several times as much as a younger person for health insurance.
Under the House Trumpcare bill, 64 year old seniors of limited means were going to see their premiums shoot up by 800 percent. I'd like to hear somebody try to explain to a lifelong trucker or somebody who spent decades cleaning offices to put food on their family's table why that's an improvement in our health care system.
These are older people who are already struggling to make ends meet, and they've been told for the last seven years that "repeal and replace" would lower their health care costs. Now they're facing the reality of Trumpcare, which says that they'll somehow have to spend the bulk of their income on health insurance - and in some cases it'll take up nearly all of it. But it's not just older people facing an age tax who will see their costs rise.
Trumpcare cuts middle class tax benefits for health care that were put in place under the Affordable Care Act. Particularly out in rural areas, that means premiums are going to be a much bigger burden on typical, middle-class families.
The Republican health plan ends the bedrock guarantee that nobody will face discrimination over pre-existing conditions.
Working adults - 30, 40, 50 years old -- who thought they were home free with employer-sponsored insurance could once again face some of the worst insurance company abuses - annual and lifetime limits on benefits. One new report says 27 million Americans could get hit by annual limits, and 20 million could face lifetime limits.
So if a 35 year old develops cancer and needs to go through expensive surgeries and chemotherapy, busting through those caps could mean they face decades digging out from a mountain of medical debts.
Second, Trumpcare is built around an
The Medicaid nursing home benefit helps pick up the tab for two out of three nursing home beds in America. Because the fact is, growing old in this country is expensive. You can do everything right through a lifetime of hard work, scrimping and saving, putting off vacations or big purchases to be financially prudent. But still, a lot of seniors spend down their savings. That's when Medicaid steps in to help cover the cost of nursing homes and other long-term care services.
One year in a nursing home costs more than
Of course Medicaid does a lot more than cover nursing home care. Thirty seven million kids are enrolled in Medicaid, and it's a vital source of care and support for kids and adults with disabilities.
Medicaid is the only lifeline that thousands and thousands of Americans fighting opioid addiction have in their struggle to put their lives back together. No community anywhere in the country has escaped this epidemic. Since Medicaid was expanded under the ACA, it has been leading the fight against the opioid epidemic by improving access for millions of people to treatment for mental health and substance abuse disorders. But with the Republican plan's enormous cuts, thousands of people could lose their best shot to recover from addiction and lead healthy lives.
Finally,
We're also the committee with the expertise on health care at a staff level and as lawmakers. But with the majority leader keeping this process locked behind closed doors, Chairman Hatch and I, along with all of the
Back in the run-up to the Affordable Care Act in 2009, the
When the legislation went to the floor, the
That's how the legislative process is supposed to look from the beginning - the committees do the hard work out in the open, gathering input from experts and the public, and then the
That's not what's happening on Trumpcare. This bill is shrouded in secrecy, and the public is in the dark. There will be no hearings on the impact it'll have on the millions of people who rely on Medicaid for health insurance. There will be no hearings on what it'll mean when pre-existing conditions are once again a scarlet letter. There will be no hearings asking how a 64 year old of limited means is supposed to deal with the age tax swallowing up their entire income.
When the Senate Republican health plan hits the floor, it'll get 20 hours of debate before time expires and the final votes are cast. That's it. Twenty hours to decide the future of health care in America.
So it's go time on health care. It's time for Americans to speak out. If you have a story about how Trumpcare will affect your family, you can share it on my website at www.wyden.senate.gov/ts. Or you can use the hashtag #AmericaSpeaksOut. We're going to keep at it here on the floor in the hours and days ahead, but right now, it's time for the grassroots to rise up because this debate is coming fast.
So with that, I yield the floor.
Read this original document at: https://www.finance.senate.gov/ranking-members-news/wyden-statement-on-senate-floor-on-the-consequences-of-trumpcare


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