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Camp Statement: Motion to Recommit Small Business Tax Bill (H.R. 5486) and Repeal of Democrats’ Requirement Forcing Americans to Buy Health Insurance

June 15, 2010

With the unemployment rate stuck at nearly 10 percent, far too many Americans and small businesses are struggling to get by.  While the bill before us contains some limited benefits, it does little to help small businesses create the jobs so many Americans desperately need.

The Motion to Recommit keeps the underlying bill intact and provides real help to Americans by repealing one of the most onerous provisions of the new health care law: the individual mandate that – while exempting illegal immigrants – forces Americans to buy government-approved health insurance or pay a tax if they don’t. 

The federal government has never required its citizens to purchase a particular product before, and doing so with health insurance violates basic principles of freedom and individual choice.  No American should be forced to purchase health insurance they don’t want and can’t afford.

This provision is so controversial that 20 states and the nation’s leading small business organization – the National Federation of Independent Business – have filed a lawsuit questioning its constitutionality.

While legal experts will soon start arguing that case, we already know that the individual mandate tax penalty will fall hardest middle- and low-income Americans.  According to the Congressional Budget Office, in 2016, nearly 75 percent of Americans who pay this tax will have household incomes below 500 percent of the Federal Poverty Level (roughly $73,000 for a married couple with no children).

CBO also tells us that the Democrats’ health care law will increase premiums for millions of Americans by up to 13 percent – that’s a premium increase of about $2,100.  As the Democrats’ health care law drives up the cost of health care premiums even higher, it will become more and more unaffordable for American families to comply with the mandate.

Repealing this mandate will directly benefit millions of Americans and uphold the individual freedoms upon which this nation was founded.  It has the added benefit of eliminating the need for the IRS to hire thousands of additional employees – possibly as many as 16,500 – just to enforce the new health care law.

The recently enacted health care law is bad for workers, bad for employers and bad for America.  Clearly, we need to repeal and replace this law with common sense reforms that will actually lower health care costs and let Americans keep the plan they have and like.

I urge my colleagues to stand with the American people and vote for the Motion to Recommit.

I yield back the balance of my time.

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