Articles Tagged ‘Associated Press’

Grassley, Enzi ready to walk away from bipartisan health care talks?

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Bipartisan talks on health care reform would appear to be all but over in the U.S. Senate. A bitter exchange yesterday between the White House and  Senate Republicans Chuck Grassley and Mike Enzi - two of the so-called “Gang of Six” - coupled with President Obama’s announcement that he will address a joint session of Congress next week on the health care issue appear to have put any chance at bipartisan real compromise out of reach.

 Attacks by political operatives in the White House undermine bipartisan efforts and drive senators away from the table. Anyone who’s working on an alternative plan — one that would actually drive down costs and not drive up the deficit — knows how difficult the issues are. (Grassley spokesperson Jill Kozeny in an interview with the Associated Press.)

Kozeny’s comments came only hours after senior White House adviser David Axelrod questioned whether Grassley and Enzi were “negotiating seriously” with their Democrat counterparts in an effort to reach a compromise bill. 

If you’re sitting at a table negotiating in good faith, then you probably don’t send out mailers saying, ‘Help me stop Obama-care.’ That’s just common sense. (David Axelrod, as reported in the Wall Street Journal.)

Axelrod’s comments were in turn a reaction to a campaign letter (obtained by the Washington Post’s Ezra Klein) by the Grassley campaign in which the would-be senior negotiator on the Republican side announced “the simple truth is that I am and always have been opposed to the Obama Administration’s plans to nationalize health care. Period.” The White House was also less than pleased with Enzi’s turn at the weekly Republican radio address this past weekend in which he accused Obama and the Democrats of pursuing a “go-it-alone” strategy.

I hope the President and the Democratic-controlled Congress will reject the go-it-alone path that they are currently on.  If they do, we’ll have a chance to truly work on a real bill that will address those critical issues.

 

I think the radio address over the weekend by Senator Enzi repeating many of the generic Republican talking points that Republicans are using that have bragged about being opposed to health care are tremendously unfortunate but in some ways illuminating. It appears that at least in Senator Enzi’s case, he doesn’t believe there’s a pathway to get bipartisan support, and the President thinks that’s wrong. I think that Senator Enzi has clearly turned over his cards on bipartisanship, and decided that it’s time to walk away from the table. (White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs.)

Grassley and Enzi’s supposed change of heart is no doubt the result of what Grover Norquist coined “the August Revolt” in town hall meetings across the country. In this August 12 video from Fox Business, Carl Cameron notes that Grassley’s own constituents aren’t pleased with his role as a negotiator on health care reform.

With Grassley and Enzi seemingly ready to walk away from bipartisan talks and President Obama finally ready to step into the debate in a serious way, it looks like the health care reform debate is about to take another radical turn and the prospects for a reform bill before the end of 2009 seem less likely than ever before.

Oh, How Sweet It Is… to be David Axelrod

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

In the cruel world of American politics, a dutiful staffer will toil long into the night mulling over phone banking lists and reviewing profiles of high-power donors. He exchanges his personal life for 6 a.m. conference calls and his car becomes a billboard in transit. His diet consists of stale coffee and an endless supply of nicotine. An unenviable existence, to say the least, but one that is endured in hopes of seeing his boss declared victorious on election night and of seizing the resulting opportunities that lay ahead.

For David Axelrod, those opportunities were beyond imagine. As Barack Obama’s top campaign adviser, Axelrod carefully formulated the strategy and framing that ultimately earned the far Left U.S. Senator from Illinois the Democratic Party’s nomination and eventually, the White House. Such a feat was to be rewarded even more handsomely than previous campaign managers, who typically cram themselves into strategic, though often unwelcome, roles in the new administration.

President Obama bestowed upon Axelrod the title of “Senior Adviser” for his fledgling administration. After all, the president certainly made no secret of his plans to fill the White House with his Chicago-based allies. Axelrod joined the ranks of Windy City natives, such as then-Congressman Rahm Emanuel, who later became the White House Chief of Staff, and his brother, Dr. Ezekiel “Zeke” Emanuel, who was tasked with crafting health care reform legislation for the Administration. As if hanging out with his hometown buddies wasn’t enough of an incentive, Axelrod was encouraged by his national agenda-setting role and a $200,000 annual salary.

Despite all the perks of living a politico’s dream of further expanding his sphere of influence, Axelrod appeared dissatisfied by the substantial pay cut of shifting from the private to public service sector. According to a November 2008 Politico report, the political strategist’s firm collected more than $35 million in profits since 1998 for their extensive lobbying and consulting work, $2.5 million of which came from Obama’s presidential campaign, and Axelrod would be forced to decide whether to take a leadership role in the most liberal White House in American history, or to stick with his firm in Chicago.

Luckily for David Axelrod, he never actually had to make that choice. Axelrod began his work in the White House, but did not entirely abandon his booming consulting company. Certainly, this seems like a bit of a dilemma of ethics, with one man receiving a taxpayer-funded salary, while also maintaining private sector-based income in the same field. But in typical Obama Administration fashion, this sort of moral conundrum would not deter the President’s senior adviser, who sought to capitalize on the country’s current hot button issue: health care reform.

While Axelrod worked behind the scenes to craft policy that would lead to a government overhaul of the medical industry, his firm in Chicago lobbied special interest groups to earn massive media contracts that would help dictate political discourse during the debate. According to an August 19, 2009 Associated Press report, President Obama’s efforts to push his health care reform agenda have created a “financial windfall in the election offseason to Democratic consulting firms that are closely connected” to the President and Axelrod.

These coalition groups are currently running “at least $24 million in pro-overhaul ads” with the help of GMMB, a consulting group led by a “top Obama campaign strategist” and AKPD Message and Media, the firm owned by none other than David Axelrod. Michael Axelrod, David’s son, now manages the day-to-day affairs of his father’s AKPD Message and Media, aided in part by his employee, David Plouffe, Obama’s presidential campaign manager.

One of their biggest clients, Americans for Stable Quality Care, is comprised of political and financial heavyweights like the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), American Medical Association (AMA), FamiliesUSA and PhRMA, the last promising to pony up $150 million to promote the President’s health care reform agenda.

While the Associated Press concedes that there is “no evidence that Axelrod directly profited from the group’s ads,” they also admit that he will draw $2 million from the firm over the next four years. The larger issue, Sheila Krumholz, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, contends, is a “network of relationships and overlapping interests” that could become a “problem as Obama tries to win the public over on health care and fulfill his promise to change the way Washington works.”

Indeed, candidate Obama repeatedly condemned such “inside baseball” dealings, lamenting that this sort of behavior leads to the American people distrusting lawmakers to govern responsibly. Even if Axelrod is not, as he claims, directly profiting from these contracts, is it not political patronage for his firm, and really, his son, to enjoy profitable deals with longtime Obama cohorts, like the SEIU? 

And even despite attempts of both David Axelrod and AKPD to distance themselves from each other, AKDP and GMBB, a partner firm in the health care reform media blitz, both “proudly proclaim their connections to Obama on their Web sites.”

AKPD has a full page on Axelrod that includes pictures of Obama. In one photo, Obama hugs Plouffe on election night.

“We are deeply honored to have been part of Barack Obama’s historic campaign to change America and the world,” GMMB says on its Web site. GMMB’s partners include Jim Margolis, a senior strategist for Obama’s presidential campaign.

Fox News reports that  leading lobbying law expert Kenneth Gross is not at all shocked by this relationship, finding it to be only natural for such a profitable favor to be given to AKPD and GMMB. 

“To victor go the spoils. The health care message is very much like a campaign message and it’s not surprising they would use the same vendor that knows the substance of the administration’s issues,” Gross said.

It seems that the two consulting groups have even more explaining to do, as it is apparent they have profited tremendously from David Axelrod’s political affiliations on a national level (Associated Press).

Both GMMB and AKPD also have worked for Democrats this year. The Democratic National Committee paid AKPD at least $106,000 for polling, media production, communication consulting and travel costs from February through April. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee paid GMMB roughly $75,000 from February through June for ads. And GMMB took in at least $9,000 this year from Senate leader Reid’s political action committee for communications consulting.

Republicans argue that such patronage is deplorable and should serve as a cause for alarm for the American people (Fox News).

But House Republicans insist PhRMA had a hand in hiring the firms — and continue to question the motives of both the drug lobby and the White House.

“Out of all the firms Pharma could choose to do their media work, they chose David Axelrod’s firm, which still maintains Axelrod’s son on the payroll and owes Axelrod himself $2 million,” House Republican Conference spokesman Mike Lloyd wrote in an e-mail.

“It’s hard to believe the public can be assured that David Axelrod isn’t influenced by any of this in the course of the health care debate. For an administration that promised ‘change’ and to be above even an appearance of impropriety this does not even come close to passing the smell test,” Lloyd wrote.

When President Obama proclaimed that he wanted to bring about “change,” what he really meant was that he wanted more of the same, just with liberals at the helm. He got his wish with David Axelrod.

Town Hall Diaries Part 8: Another Day, Another Fake Doctor

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

sheila-leavittBarely a week ago, a town hall meeting in Houston sponsored by Representative Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas) was marred in controversy. Of course there was the highly publicized incident in which the congresswoman was seen answering her cell phone as a constituent, a cancer survivor, was asking her question. But there was also the moment during the event when the representative called on a woman during the Q & A session named Roxana Mayer who claimed to be a primary care physician and spoke in support of Obamacare. Turns out that Ms. Mayer wasn’t a medical professional at all. She was however an Obama campaign volunteer and delegate.

The same controversy seems to have hit an already raucous town hall session sponsored by Massachusetts Representative Barney Frank that took place this past Tuesday evening. And who says lightening never strikes twice?

The individual at the center of the dispute is a woman named Sheila Leavitt. The Associated Press and other mainstream media outlets have identified her as a ‘physician from Newton, Massachusetts.’ As Mrs. Leavitt questioned Rep. Frank she said she “hoped for changes that would support primary care physicians who are not paid as much as specialists” and chastised “some of the rowdy critics” she claimed were “using the same ‘talking points’ as those who showed up at similar meetings around the country.”

Buck Right and AR15 have questioned her legitimacy as a medical professional. Buck Right found that no one named Sheila Leavitt is listed as a licensed physician on the website for the Massachusetts State Medical Board. Additionally, a poster at Free Republic searched American Medical Association’s site and failed to find a physician – either a member or non-member of AMA – named Sheila Leavitt in the Massachusetts area.

Then a commentator on Buck Right’s article identifying himself as Mrs. Leavitt’s sixteen-year-old son stated, She stopped actively practicing medicine 26 some odd years ago — when she began the full time job of lovingly raising four children.”

That fails to adequately answer, however, the reason why she is not listed as a licensed physician. Don’t fret, though. A commentator named Granny over at Gateway Pundit notes, “Massachusetts licenses every last danged thing. If you want to fix your neighbors porch you need a $150 license to do so. If the medical licensing board website does not list her as having a medical license, then she is NOT practicing medicine in the state of Massachusetts.” Another commentator at Gateway Pundit named BullMooseGal adds further, “Whoever the lady is, she doesn’t and hasn’t published in any reputable journal in the last thirty years (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez). That wasn’t so unusual thirty or even fifteen years ago for doctors, but over the last fifteen years, medical professionals have increasingly been expected to contribute to research, so apparently raising her kids (honorable enough) and protesting (laughably) are her professions.”

As it turns out, she’s not the physician of the family. Her husband, Andrew H. Lichtman, M.D., is, according to Michelle Malkin. Let’s not all jump on her for this, though. She probably had a good reason for misrepresenting herself like she did. As with Ms. Mayer she likely did it to give herself more credibility, something her actual past activities were unlikely to do.

Kate at Small Dead Animals did a simple Google search and miraculously found a trail of far-left political activism. The Boston Herald wrote an article about her back in 2005. The story featured her plastering a town with ‘Impeach Bush’ posters and adorning her ‘88 Toyota Corolla with bumper stickers saying “War is barbaric” and “Support our troops . . . Draft Jenna & Barbara,” in addition to placing a cardboard Uncle Sam laying in state atop a black-and-white painted cardboard coffin with the words, “Fake Elections. Fake President. Real Lies. Real War.” Nope, can’t say there is anything nutty about that.

Here’s a suggestion: if the Democrats are going to have fake medical professionals hawk Obamacare, why not use ones that actually have some name recognition among Americans? 

Who’s Calling Whom an Unruly Mob?

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

Protesters, whether bussed in by GOP operatives or natural, grass-roots political speech, are making good video footage this August - as well as hot water for legislators going home for an earful on health care reform

But watch who’s activism you call “manufactured” or “griping and complaining,” especially if you happen to be the President of the U.S.

If you’ve missed the highlights here are some members of Congress getting heckled on YouTube:

Video poster dumpdoggett adds helpful subtitles:
There’s no pushing.
There’s no shoving.
They’re shouting because they’re being ignored.

Doggett told Chris Willis Jenny Hoff of ABC affiliate KXAN protesters have been following him. “Most of the people were there with their photographs of me, my name on a tombstone, not to have a dialog, but to make a drown out any voice but theirs. … Not a grass roots effort, but organized by the Republicans - people drove more than an hour and a half to attend.”

But let’s look at the reaction in the media. So far much has been made of a memo purporting to teach people how to disrupt a much larger audience and the insinuation that these protesters are somehow less authentic for being organized:

“Sen. Mike Enzi (R-WY) isn’t giving an inch–and he’s using the angry town hall disruptions as cover,” writes Brian Beutler in Talking Points Memo.

“Enzi–who has played a key role in weakening Democrats’ health reform proposal, and whose support for the final product is far from guaranteed–said Democrats are in for ’some nasty, nasty town meetings,’ implying that the public disruptions are a symptom of liberal over reach, not of conservative rabble rousing.”

San Fransisco Chronicle’s Joe Garofoli buys the line that organized protests are somehow artificial.

They’re organized in part by conservative think tanks like FreedomWorks, which offers tips on how to disrupt a meeting (”Watch for an opportunity to yell out and challenge the Rep’s statements early,” says one) and helped in some cases by anti-tax “Tea Party” sympathizers.

Garofoli goes on, quoting Stanford prof Morris Fiorina, “This is all sound and fury, designed to get the attention of the media, which it has been.”

The Associated Press gave a particularly personal portrait of two congressmen’s reactions:

At one point, U.S. Rep. Mike Ross sat with his head in his hands while the crowd shouted. He and fellow Democratic Rep. Vic Snyder told audience members at a forum at Arkansas Children’s Hospital that they wouldn’t support a completely government-run, single-payer health insurance plan.

“But that’s what Obama wants!” an audience member shouted, leading to more heckling.

Fox News’s Alice Stewart refers to the protesters as “a growing number of Americans who want to slow down and take part in the health care debate.”

The Wall Street Journal’s opinion today pointed to the “shock on the faces of Congressmen who’ve faced the grillings back home. And really, their shock is the first thing you see in the videos.”

They had no idea how people were feeling. Their 2008 win left them thinking an election that had been shaped by anti-Bush, anti-Republican, and pro-change feeling was really a mandate without context; they thought that in the middle of a historic recession featuring horrific deficits, they could assume support for the invention of a huge new entitlement carrying huge new costs.

While we have yet to see how far the mashed potatoes will fly in this food-fight spectacle, it’s clear both sides are reaching for the dirt - and there’s no better dirt than a Nazi reference.

Town hall audiences and conservative bloggers protesting a Democratic-sponsored bill on health care reform have used the disturbing imagery to compare the plan championed by President Obama to how the Nazis treated prisoners in concentration camps.

Supporters have turned around and suggested the angry “mobs” are reminiscent of Adolf Hitler’s blind followers.

“They’re carrying swastikas and symbols like that to a town meeting on health care,” Nancy Pelosi told Fox News.

Ken Spain, a spokesman for the National Republican Congressional Committee, called such remarks evidence that Democrats are “desperate to climb their way out of message quicksand.”

“Here’s some free advice for the Democrats: When you are attacking the voters, you are losing,” he said. “Conjuring up ‘villains’ and making elitist remarks about middle-class Americans isn’t a strategy, it’s a prayer.”

Pelosi’s words were fueled by the leak of a Right Principles memo advising people exactly how to “pack the hall” and rattle their congressperson.

Liberals and reform advocates have been using the memo as evidence that the backlash in town halls across the country is “manufactured or orchestrated.”

Associated Press becomes first “mainstream” media outlet to report abortion mandate

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

As Congress begins its summer vacation, many journalists are finally getting a chance to dig a little deeper than the talking points and White House press conferences and catch up on all of the behind-the-scenes battles in the healthcare reform debate. Yesterday, the Associated Press became the first “mainstream” media outlet to report on the hidden abortion mandate in healthcare reform legislation being considered on Capitol Hill.

 

Health care legislation before Congress would allow a new government-sponsored insurance plan to cover abortions, a decision that would affect millions of women and recast federal policy on the divisive issue.

Federal funds for abortions are now restricted to cases involving rape, incest or danger to the life of the mother. Abortion opponents say those restrictions should carry over to any health insurance sold through a new marketplace envisioned under the legislation, an exchange where people would choose private coverage or the public plan. (AP: “Gov’t insurance would allow coverage for abortion“)

 

For weeks now, HealthcareHorserace.com has been covering this issue in anticipation of a major battle over abortion that could stall, if not defeat, Democrat efforts to push for healthcare reform that would lead to unprecedented government intervention in the healthcare industry.

In the House, the Capps Amendment calls for taxpayer funds to be used to finance elective abortion procedures under a public option insurance plan. The amendment also mandates that all Americans have access to at least one private plan that covers abortion procedures.

In the Senate, the Mikulski Amendment would require insurance agencies (public or private) to contract with “essential community providers” to provide healthcare services to Americans earning less than 400% of the poverty level ($88,000 for a family of four) or risk losing the right to participate in mandatory state “American Health Benefit Gateways” as established under the HELP bill. During a protracted debate over the amendment, Mikulski admitted that Planned Parenthood qualified as an “essential community provider.” Requiring insurance companies to cover “any service deemed medically necessary or medically appropriate” by these “essential community providers” amounts to an aboriton mandate in the eyes of many conservative and pro-life advocates.

All evidence points to an unwelcome floor debate on abortion in the House and Senate when lawmakers return post-Labor Day. As Democrats try to pass healthcare reform legislation by mid-October, they’ll be faced with opposition from vulnerable and Blue Dog Democrats who could very well lose their seats in the 2010 election if they vote for a pro-abortion reform bill. If reform legislation does make its way to President Obama’s desk, look for a battle in the courts with the first serious Supreme Court showdown over abortion since Roe v. Wade in 1973.

John Thune launches Healthcare Freedom Blog

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

As lawmakers prepare for the August recess and a trip back to their home districts, Republican Senator John Thune is taking his case against Democrat plans for healthcare reform to the Internet. In announcing the Healthcare Freedom Blog, Thune said “the blog will serve as a forum for South Dakotans and citizens around the country to post their views and will be continually updated with the latest news and developments in the Congressional debate over how to reform healthcare.”

On the site, Thune lays out the principles he believes are critical to reforming healthcare - notably absent is a public option insurance plan and notably included is tort reform. The featured story on the homepage, titled Obama vs. The Facts, cleverly lists the President’s promises on healthcare reform and uses media sources, such as the New York Times and the Associated Press, to debunk them. Also featured on the blog is an online petition that simply reads: 

Yes, Senator Thune, I join you in supporting real healthcare reform that will lower costs while protecting my freedom to make healthcare decisions without interference from committees of politicians. I stand with you in opposing a government takeover of my healthcare decisions.

As the chairman of the Republican Policy Committee, Thune is considered the fourth most powerful Republican in the Senate and his blog promises to provide insight into the thinking of the party leadership as committee meetings and press conferences give way to town hall meetings and conference calls over the summer break.

Obama Administration Booed at Health Care Town Hall in Reserve, La.

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Secretaries from Obama Administration

Somewhere around Interstate 10’s Exit 206 in Louisiana is a tiny town called Reserve. Situated just in between Baton Rouge and New Orleans, the community is located in St. John Parish, a heavily agricultural and economically modest town known especially for its Army National Guard base.

The biggest thing ever to happen in the history of Reserve, La. occurred Monday at 11:30 a.m. Four cabinet secretaries from the Obama Administration visited the small town on their Rural Tour, speaking in 10 different communities across the U.S. The event featured a panel discussion and townhall-style question-and-answer session with Secretary Hilda Solis of the Department of Labor, Secretary Kathleen Sebelius of the Department of Health and Human Services, Secretary Tom Vilsack of the Department of Agriculture and Secretary Eric Shineski of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Cars lined the block with some people walking 15 or more minutes to park and enter the building. The overflow from the crowd led into the halls of the Army National Guard building, with some trying to get a peek into the packed room. One estimate indicated at least 800 people were in attendance. National and local media outlets lined the back of the room with cameras shoved next to each other, allowing barely enough room for all the reporters.

The Obama Administration probably didn’t expect that kind of crowd. After all, it was not until blogger Jeff Blanco, the publisher of louisianaconservative.com, broke the story that anyone knew about it all. Surely, the Administration hoped to fill the room with more supporters, likely from ACORN, which is based out of nearby New Orleans.

ACORN and a few other left-leaning groups were present, but the majority of attendees were not at all sympathetic to President Obama’s health care reform proposals, including the Tea Party organizations from around the entire state of Louisiana, the Louisiana Right to Life and activists from Americans for Prosperity. Additionally, folks who heard about it that day in the mainstream media showed up, many of whom were veterans.

Most found it an incredibly frustrating experience. Several people got up and left, explaining that they could not stomach the “spin” offered by President Obama’s Cabinet.

“I just cannot follow the rhetoric,” one veteran said as he exited the room only a few minutes into the townhall.

Lines wrapped around the room, as attendees waited their turn to ask questions of the Cabinet secretaries. One woman, Tracy Chevalier, talked about her Cuban heritage and explained that the health care in America, from her experiences, was far more accessible than what she experienced in her home country.

Then Chevalier asked if the panelists could answer her question simply with a “yes” or “no.” She requested that the American public be allowed five to seven days to review the bill before it is voted upon in Congress. The crowd broke into thunderous applause and cheering.

Secretary Kathleen Sebelius responded, “I would hope you would allow me more than a yes or no answer on this one.” The crowd then began to boo.

That was the overall tone for the entire townhall. Booing. Protesting. General hostility towards the Cabinet. All of these were further powerful after Secretary Sebelius admitted that the federal employees’ benefits would remain the same, even after a public option was added, with screaming and booing even louder from the crowd. The hour and a half-long meeting closed with dozens of people still in line to ask questions.

Glenn Ellerbe, president of Acadiana Tea Party in Lafayette, La., explained that he needed Secretary Hilda Solis to carefully review the cap-and-trade legislation, as it would greatly damage Louisiana’s energy-based economy.

“It will be a cold day in hell before he (Obama) socializes my country,” he said. This statement has been used since by the Associated Press and has been played on the Rush Limbaugh radio show and Hannity on Fox News.

The crowd went wild, with everyone standing up and cheering. Some people began chanting “U-S-A.”

It is likely that the national media outlets present were not anticipating such an anti-Obamacare display. However, there was no denying that the nearly all of the hundreds of folks gathered in that tiny room in Reserve, La., were not there to join the ranks of ACORN but instead, to show their disapproval of the health care legislation presented by the Obama Administration.

And there’s no leftist PR spin doctor who can remedy the public opinion ill that is plaguing them more and more as the debate continues.

Doctor Group Blasts AMA for Supporting House Democrats’ Health Care Bill

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

The Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS) released a statement Friday criticizing the leadership of the American Medical Society (AMA) for what it deems as selling out “patients and the profession for endorsing a House bill that supports government medicine.” (MSN)

According to Kathryn Serkes, spokesperson for AAPS, the AMA endorsed House Bill 3200 in exchange for a “few dollars increase in Medicare reimbursement rates,” essentially telling patients, “It’s about the money, stupid.” Serkes added that while the AMA stood with President Obama to encourage a reduction in medical costs, they also “sent out an alert to its members urging them to contact Congress in support of a physician pay raise” on the same day.

AAPS facilitates a website, takebackmedicine.com, that urges medical professionals to back physician-friendly and patient-centered reforms. The doctors’ group, founded in 1943, aims to “preserve the sanctity of the patient-physician relationship from third-party intrusion,” according to their mission statement. They are member-supported and do not receive funding from government grants or financial backing from corporate or pharmaceutical interests.

AAPS believes that the AMA has “sold patient choice, patient privacy and patient control to the highest bidder.” The group has long been an alternative voice to the AMA, though Serkes asserts that does not make them “anti-reform.” “Our doctors are for reform—real reform that puts patients and doctors in control, not the government,” Serkes said.

Serkes does not feel that the AMA is the only weak link in the medical community. “Organized medicine has been spineless. Today a surgeon from Arkansas told me that he is appalled that the American College of Surgeons sent him an email saying, in effect, that they wanted a seat at the table, and were willing to endorse the bill if that’s what it took to get that seat, she explained.

According to Lindsey Tanner of the Associated Press, the AMA’s endorsement of the House bill, which includes a public option, is a “bold step for a traditionally conservative group with a checkered past on health reforms.” Indeed, the public option was a rather unpopular proposal for members of the AMA, who listened to President Obama promote his health care agenda at their general membership meeting in Chicago last month. Then, leading members of the AMA vocalized their opposition to his proposed reforms, and according to the Associated Press, “likened the notion to communism.”

The AMA argues, however, that the need to insure 50 million Americans makes health care reform absolutely vital. The AMA went so far as to send letters expressing their support for the “American Affordable Health Choices Act” to all three of the committees in the House who are all tasked with structuring the bill.

It is still unclear about the true feelings of the AMA regarding health care reform. Serkes appeared on the Fox Business Network on June 11, 2009, where she reiterated the AAPS’s unhappiness with the recent flip-flopping of their colleagues at the AMA. The headline read: “AMA May Oppose Government Health Care?”

And apparently, that little question mark is the key. Is the AMA drifting in the direction that the political winds blow to garner legitimacy, or are they rooted in concrete principles? Will they use very modest financial gains through improvements to Medicare reimbursement as an excuse to abandon their stand against the public option? Now that they have sided with the Democrats in Congress and the White House, will they be guaranteed a perpetual place at the table during the health care debate, or will the Left ditch them the moment the AMA objects to even the most insignificant aspect of liberal health care reform?

One thing is for certain: no matter what the AMA says, does or complies with, the AAPS intends to oppose them if they continue to exchange political expediency and dollars and cents for true health care reform that keeps patients and doctors at the focus, not bureaucrats and special interests.

In interviews, lawmakers concede healthcare reform not likely this year

Monday, July 13th, 2009

The writing has been on the wall for weeks. The October deadline imposed by President Obama for sweeping healthcare reform is slipping away. Over the weekend, lawmakers on both sides of the aisle began to concede the obvious in national interviews. If healthcare reform is going to succeed, it likely won’t be settled before Congress recesses for the year.

There is no chance that it’s going to be done by August. President Obama was right about one thing. He said if it’s not done quickly, it won’t be done at all. Why did he say that? Because the longer it hangs out there, the more the American people are skeptical, anxious, and even in opposition to it. (Republican Senator Jon Kyl - As told to ABC News’ This Week.)

Democrats are a bit more positive about the long-term prognosis for healthcare reform, but are not willing to commit to an August deadline for passage of legislation to be reconciled prior to the October recess.

The AP is reporting the administration’s Democratic partners in Congress hinted they would not deliver legislation before leaving town for an August recess. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., said Obama should be pleased with lawmakers’ progress; Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., said “there really is plenty of time.”

Conrad’s comments are particularly telling as chairman of the Senate Budget Committee which will be called upon for a blueprint on how any reform plan will play into the federal budget - and deficit - in coming years. Additionally, Stabenow and Conrad are both members of the Senate Finance Committee which is being looked to for a bipartisan bill that will serve as the starting point for reconciliation.

President Rejects Tort Reform, Highlights Political Allegiances

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

In an Associated Press piece, Ricardo Alonso-Zaldiver points out that President Obama’s meeting with physicians in the American Medical Association wasn’t the typical tear-filled hysteria that the president is used to witnessing upon his entrance into a room.

This is because the AMA, like many other medical groups, opposes his plans to nationalize health care through Sen. Ted Kennedy’s (D-MA) bill, “American Health Choices Act.” When confronted about instituting tort reform, ending lawsuit abuse and ultimately resulting in lower health care costs, President Obama refused to side with the doctors, stirring up frustrations and causing those there to boo him.

“But what could they expect? If Obama announced support for malpractice limits, that would set trial lawyers and unions — major supporters of Democratic candidates — on the attack. Not to mention consumer groups.

Every other group in the health care debate has a wish list and a top priority. Insurers don’t want competition from the government. Employers don’t want to be told they have to offer medical coverage to their workers. Hospitals want to stave off Medicare cuts. Drug companies want to charge what the market will bear.”

If one can muddle through the defenses of the AP on behalf of President Obama, there is a pretty important admission here by the mainstream media: Obama owes unions and trial lawyers.

Yes, health care unions like the SEIU (Service Employees International Union), notorious for their rallies that can turn violent, are owed political favors by Obama.  Unions have contributed 92 percent of their campaign donations to Democrats since 1990. That comes to a grand total of $614 million. Republicans received a meager $53 million since 1990, or $2.94 million annually, as opposed to the Democrats’ $34.1 million a year. The SEIU, by the way, endorses a public option plan.

And of course, trial lawyers, whose abundance of wealth often stems from “ambulance chasing,” or seeking the maximum pay-out for a medical injury as a result of an accident or medical error. This practice results in the skyrocketing of insurance costs for physicians, who live every day in fear of being sued by a patient. These costs get passed onto the consumers, or other patients, who subsidize frivolous lawsuits. 

In a 2007 article on law.com, an online version of the Legal Times, the author points out this interesting factoid about then-Democratic candidate Sen. Obama:

 

“Despite Obama’s silence on trial lawyer issues in the current campaign, he co-sponsored the National Medical Error Disclosure and Compensation Act with Sen. Clinton in 2005. That legislation, which never made it to the full Senate for a vote, would have created a system for doctors and injured patients to negotiate out of court, but it did not include caps on medical malpractice claims.

‘Barack was a practicing civil rights attorney and constitutional law professor. This excites trial lawyers,’ says Wagar. ‘[Civil rights are] the reason we’re able to take on [General Motors] and pharmaceutical companies. He speaks to that.”

What a scary, scary foreshadowing of what was to come for both the automobile and medical industries. And furthermore, according to campaignmoney.com, self-described trial lawyers donated 79 percent of their contributions to Democrats since 1999. 

At least the Associated Press is being honest. They’re breaking it down into teams:

TEAM A: President Obama, Liberals, Unions, Trial Lawyers
TEAM B: Doctors, Insurance Companies, Non-unionized Hospital Employees, Employers,  Pharmaceutical Companies (and I’d like to throw in taxpayers, patients and free enterprise).

I think we should join in with the AMA and boo President Obama. While he claims he wants to cut down costs, he’s refusing to acknowledge that one of the most obvious causes for high costs of health care is the refusal of the federal government to institute tort reform. And we are all paying the price because of it.

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