home / openregs / congressional_record

congressional_record: CREC-2025-06-03-pt1-PgH2386

Congressional Record — full text of everything said on the floor of Congress. Speeches, debates, procedural actions from 1994 to present. House, Senate, Extensions of Remarks, and Daily Digest.

Data license: Public Domain (U.S. Government data) · Data source: Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API

This data as json

granule_id date congress session volume issue title chamber granule_class sub_granule_class page_start page_end speakers bills citation full_text
CREC-2025-06-03-pt1-PgH2386 2025-06-03 119 1     ONE BIG, UGLY BILL HOUSE HOUSE ALLOTHER H2386 H2386 [{"name": "Joe Courtney", "role": "speaking"}] [{"congress": "119", "type": "HR", "number": "1"}, {"congress": "119", "type": "HR", "number": "1"}] 171 Cong. Rec. H2386 Congressional Record, Volume 171 Issue 94 (Tuesday, June 3, 2025) [Congressional Record Volume 171, Number 94 (Tuesday, June 3, 2025)] [House] [Page H2386] From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov] ONE BIG, UGLY BILL (Mr. Courtney of Connecticut was recognized to address the House for 5 minutes.) Mr. COURTNEY. Mr. Speaker, today, June 3, Congress reconvenes after a 12-day break. On May 22, the last time we were here, this Chamber was involved in a 2-day marathon. H.R. 1, the misnamed one big, beautiful bill, was jammed through in the dead of the night, as it was being written in real time, by a vote of 215 to 214. During my time home, I held two townhalls. One was up in Tolland, Connecticut, near the border of Massachusetts. The other was down along the shoreline in Madison, Connecticut. Both townhalls were well- attended. Last night in Madison, it was standing room only. People were bursting with questions about how a bill that can change the tax code for the next 10 years, that can intervene in terms of our healthcare system, in terms of taking away people's health coverage, can happen with no transparency and no public input. As I said, it was being written in the dead of the night prior to the vote on May 22. This is what we know now as the dust has settled in terms of what the impact of this bill is. In terms of healthcare, the bill is going to cut our Medicaid program, America's largest healthcare program, and extract roughly $700 billion from the system over the next 10 years. The Affordable Care Act, subsidizes premiums, which provides health insurance for millions of Americans. Again, those premiums are going to be cut. As a result, people are going to lose their health insurance. That is not me saying that. That is the Congressional Budget Office, the neutral umpire that calls balls and strikes around this Congress who is saying that. Again, they have calculated that 15 million Americans will lose their health insurance as a result of this measure which was passed by the majority and jammed through in the dead of the night. In Connecticut, we have already seen what the numbers mean in terms of this bill. The Kaiser Family Foundation is not a partisan group. They have been studying healthcare trends and finance for decades. They determined that 140,000 citizens in the State of Connecticut will lose their health coverage as a result of this bill. As the dust has settled, we now know of one thing that didn't get a lot of attention. As a result of the deficit impact of this bill, which is going to add trillions of dollars to the national debt, it is going to trigger a sequestration, an automatic cut to the Medicare system. Medicare is the system that provides health insurance for people over 65 and people on disability. That is $500 billion over the next 10 years. Again, it is going to be a cut across the board to hospitals, to physicians, and to a whole series of medical devices and pharmacy products that are covered by Medicare. Again, this is because of the reckless deficit spending that this bill creates. That is not me saying that. The calculation of the Joint Committee on Taxation was $3.7 trillion of new debt on top of the $36 trillion of debt that we have today. The Wharton School of Finance, where President Trump attended school, calculated $3 trillion, as well. When they added the interest costs that are going to be paid on that additional deficit, that spending, that is going to push the number closer to $5 trillion. Again, today the deficit is $36 trillion. We are spending $89 billion a month in terms of interest costs on the existing debt. That is larger than what we spend in the Department of Defense on a monthly basis. It is bigger than any other account in the discretionary budget of this government. This bill accomplishes two harmful, damaging impacts to America which are, number one, 15 million people are going to lose their health insurance. We are also going to see the deficit grow by anywhere between $3 trillion and $5 trillion. For what? It is to reward the top 1 percent whose tax cuts are going to be extended and enlarged for many over the coming years, leaving working families and the poor in the dust. We can do better than this as a nation. Again, it is not too late to stop this. The Senate is now going to take up this bill. The external pressure is going to rise up with the American Hospital Association and with patient groups like the American Cancer Society, the American Lung Association, Autism Speaks, and people who represent disability groups. They are rising up now to stop this bill because of the harm it is going to cause on individuals and families all across this country. It is time to stop this one big, ugly bill that is going to do so much damage to the American people. ____________________

Links from other tables

  • 1 row from granule_id in crec_speakers
  • 1 row from granule_id in crec_bills
Powered by Datasette · Queries took 20.13ms · Data license: Public Domain (U.S. Government data) · Data source: Federal Register API & Regulations.gov API