Mike Kelly was born in Pittsburgh and raised in Butler, Pennsylvania, where he has lived for more than 50 years. After graduating from Butler High School in 1966, Mike attended the University of Notre Dame on a football and academic scholarship. After college, Mike moved back to Butler to work at Kelly Chevrolet-Cadillac, Inc., a company founded by his father in the early 1950s. Mike took ownership of the dealership in the mid-1990s and expanded its operations to include Hyundai and KIA franchises.
“Going forward, we will work on putting together commonsense solutions to reduce health care costs and make sure every American, regardless of preexisting conditions, has access to health care. But we are going to do it in a way that keeps the government out of the exam room and keeps a quality of care that Americans deserve.”
Two years ago, the president signed into law his signature health care bill, which will include the government takeover of one-sixth of the U.S. economy. It is the largest expansion of the federal government in decades, and a majority of the American people want it stopped.
To that end, I have worked to repeal and defund this disastrous law before its full implementation, which will cost taxpayers more than a trillion dollars, take away $500 billion from Medicare, and force millions of people to lose their current health care coverage, putting them on government-run programs instead.
The House Republican majority has voted 29 times so far to repeal and defund, and dismantle President Obama’s health care law. Here’s an overview of these efforts:
The president’s health care law makes it harder for small businesses to hire new workers, jeopardizes seniors’ access to care, and adds to the debt that threatens job growth. It needs to go.
The majority of Americans do not like the president's health care law and want to see it overturned. I will continue to do my part to right the wrong that is Obamacare and replace it with commonsense, cost-effective solutions that will improve access to health care, protect consumer choice, and preserve the doctor-patient relationship by keeping government out of the examining room.