- Record: House Floor
- Section type: Floor speeches
- Chamber: House
- Date: March 24, 2026
- Congress: 119th Congress
- Why this source matters: This section came from the House floor portion of the record.
Mr. Murphy of North Carolina was recognized to address the House for 5 minutes.)
Mr. MURPHY. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to shed light on some of the egregious, profit-driven practices that American health insurance companies are using to wreak havoc on the American patient.
patients, primarily those in rural and underserved areas of eastern North Carolina. I have taken care of every patient who walked into my office, regardless of their ability to pay, but the American patient should not be one illness away from bankruptcy.
- system of American healthcare is sicker.
on Ways and Means hearing which hosted CEOs from the largest health insurance companies in this country for a hearing on healthcare affordability.
few insurance companies that are squeezing every last penny out of patients and those who care for patients.
This is a matter far beyond partisan politics.
These four insurance companies alone made more than $1.1 trillion in revenue. In fact, take a look at the graph here that I pulled from Wendell Potter's recent Substack article titled: “2025: Big Insurance's $1.7 Trillion Year.” It shows the ridiculously insane profits of Centene, Cigna, CVS, Humana, and United over the last 2 years.
example out of UnitedHealthcare because they are the worst actor. It is the largest insurance company by over $400 billion of revenue in 2024.
two companies that are on top of it in the Fortune 500 list. It is the most consolidated of all insurance companies, with over 2,700 in subsidiaries. They own doctors' offices, home health agencies, pharmacies, surgery centers, and because they make so much money, they are able to finance a large bank.
Size isn't just the problem. It is, however, their practice. They are mired in allegations of fraud and abuse. In fact, there are accusations right now that by playing the system to their own profit, United is currently under investigation by the Department of Justice for alleged Medicare Advantage billing and coding fraud.
adding diagnoses to patients' records for conditions that no doctor treated, which triggered an extra $8.7 billion in payments.
lot more commonly in their Medicare Advantage plan than in a fee-for- service plan: A diagnosis of senile purpura, 732 to 26 in fee-for- service; obstructed leg arteries, 403 times compared to just 5 in fee- for-service; secondary hyperaldosteronism, 318 times compared to just 8 times in fee-for-service.
In fact, taxpayers paid Medicare Advantage organizations $50 billion in 2021 for diseases diagnosed but not treated—a total waste of taxpayer money. It is like being diagnosed with being left-handed. There is no reason to treat it, yet they charge the government anyway.
every year. Right now the average premium cost for a family of four is $27,000 a year. Make no mistake, the ridiculous climb in premium costs could have been prevented.
companies for insurance companies. The unfortunate truth is that the ACA failed in its promise to lower healthcare costs.
insurance company profits have skyrocketed. But guess what else also skyrocketed—patient premiums. Inflation has risen by 2.6 percent since 1999, while insurance premiums have risen 6 percent per year. Over the last 5 years, nearly half of small employers have had to cut profit or suffered a loss to pay for insurance premiums.
The health insurance companies are bleeding the American people dry. They are destroying access to high-quality, affordable care in this country. Companies like United, which have destroyed the market with a profit-first-patient-last vertical integration, need to be broken up to restore competition in the marketplace. This is the best way to lower premiums.
is too late. Insurance companies have a stranglehold on Washington, D.C., and that must be stopped.