New hires of the federal goverment can become members of the FEHB, the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program. They fill out a form, the (SF) 2809, on which they designate which health plan they want for coverage. In Part A, they provide information about themselves and members of their family who are to be covered. There is also a Part E. That has a box that federal employees can check to indicate that "I do NOT want to enroll in the FEHB Program."
New members of Congress or the Senate who oppose "socialized healthcare" can simply display, on their official website, their (SF) 2809 with the box in Part E checked to indicate that they have opted themselves and their family members out of coverage in the FEHB plan.
It's just like that "real" Hawai'ian birth certificate that the birthers insist is being kept from them. Make the repealers show their (SF) 2809 with the box in Part E checked.
Federal Form (SF) 2809, FEHB Health Benefits Election FormScroll down to page 14 to see Part E.
In case members of Congress have a plan separate from the FEHB, surely there is a corresponding form. I will accept that as evidence.
(Edited) Members of Congress are eligible to join FEHB:
Benefits question by Hopkins doctor surprises fellow freshmenRep.-elect Harris snagged in health care flap
Benefits question by Hopkins doctor surprises fellow freshmen
November 16, 2010|By Paul West, The Baltimore Sun
....
In fact, the health insurance plan at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, where Harris has worked since the 1980s, does cover employees from the first day of employment. That provision makes the Hopkins plan more generous than most, including the Federal Employees Health Benefits plan, which starts covering new members of Congress and their families about a month after they enroll.
According to Politico, when Harris, a married father of five, learned he wouldn't get health insurance from Day One, he asked the two women who were conducting the benefits briefing if he could purchase coverage from the government to fill the gap, according to Politico.
....
Harris may have seemed particularly vulnerable on the health care front, given his background as a doctor and 12-year career as a lawmaker.
"As the only physician in the Maryland state Senate, I know how legislatures approach health care issues," Harris wrote in an op-ed article last year for the Daily Times of Salisbury. "Politicians are usually tone-deaf to those who know the most about the issue: patients and their health care providers."