Protecting Access to Healthcare Act

Floor Speech

Date: March 22, 2012
Location: Washington, DC

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Mr. CANTOR. I thank the gentleman.

Madam Chair, I rise in opposition to this amendment, which would simply delay the implementation of what we know is a cost-savings measure to so many millions of seniors--and so many millions of Americans, not just seniors.

Madam Chair, today we will vote to repeal one of PPACA's most harmful provisions, the Independent Payment Advisory Board. IPAB is emblematic of the two very different visions held by Republicans and Democrats about the path to quality care and how to control costs in our health care system.

Madam Chair, the President and his party want a centralized board of bureaucrats to control decisions about how health care is allocated to our Nation's seniors. He proposes to restrict health care choices in order to lower cost. Our American system of free enterprise, innovation, and ingenuity has made our health care centers the best in the world. Our doctors transform dire health care conditions into promising outcomes and healthy lives. We produce the world's lifesaving drugs, disease-prevention regimens, biologics, and devices. But IPAB hamstrings the best available care for our seniors by imposing artificial and arbitrary constraints on cost.

Neither the President nor congressional Democrats have proposed a solution to strengthen Medicare. Instead, the President gives 15 bureaucrats the power to make fundamental decisions about the care that seniors will have access to. Not to be deterred, the President has proposed expanding this board numerous times over the past year, vastly growing the board's scope and ability to fix prices and ultimately ration care for our Nation's seniors.

Madam Chair, the President and I do agree on this: the current Medicare reimbursement system is broken. But we don't need a board of unelected bureaucrats to control costs. As we have proposed today, there is a better path forward.

During the health care debate, the President agreed with our Nation's doctors that defensive medicine practices are driving up costs. Yet meaningful medical liability reform was not included in the 2,000-page health care law.

Madam Chair, as my colleagues have proposed today, we can model medical liability reforms on State-based laws. California, Texas, and Virginia have all implemented working solutions that drive down the cost of care. We can even propose more creative medical liability reform solutions. We're always open to new ideas and suggestions. But not delay. Moving forward with commonsense medical liability reforms will mean that doctors can continue serving patients.

It means that injured patients will be compensated more quickly and fairly. It means health care costs will go down.

Madam Chair, you don't need a new rationing board to save $3 billion. You simply need to enact liability reform policies that are so commonsense even States like California and others have had them on the books for decades.

When the entire medical community stands opposed to an idea, I would hope that our colleagues on the other side of the aisle and the President would listen. ObamaCare's IPAB is not the solution our seniors are expecting us to deliver. Our seniors deserve better.

Madam Chair, I thank Dr. Phil Roe, the gentleman from Tennessee, and Dr. Phil Gingrey, the gentlemen from Georgia, for sponsoring the PATH Act. I'd also like to recognize Chairman Fred Upton, Chairman Dave Camp, and Chairman Lamar Smith for working to strengthen Medicare for our seniors. Under their leadership, our House committees are advancing policies that will deliver the quality of health care the American people deserve.

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