Articles Tagged ‘Jake Tapper’

Lone defender of the press: Jake Tapper

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

The Administration in power, with party control of both houses of Congress and a newly-minted supreme court justice on the bench has taken aim at one of the most prominent news organizations charged with the so-called “fourth estate” watchdog function over government.

So obviously, the other news organizations, network, cable, radio and the newly-minted blogosphere have circled the wagons, cried “censorship!” and defended their Foxy brethren and Susteren.

No?

“A White House attempt to delegitimize Fox News – which in past times would have drawn howls of censorship from the press corps – has instead been greeted by a collective shrug, reports the non-partisan Politico.

“We’re doing what we think is important to make sure news is covered as fairly as possible,” a White House official told POLITICO, noting how the recent ACORN scandal story started because Fox covered it “breathlessly for weeks on end.”

Not because a major nation-wide organization receiving hundreds of millions in tax dollars didn’t blink at supporting a purportedly depraved criminal enterprise bent on child prostitution and white slavery.

Politico continues with an analysis of Fox News’ legitimacy:

Fox denies its news coverage is slanted, and even White House aides say the network’s top correspondent there, Major Garrett, is a straight shooter. But in its non-news hours, Fox mixes in a steady diet of criticism of President Barack Obama by its prominent conservative commentators Bill O’Reilly, Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck. It’s a formula that works for Fox, with the highest ratings in cable news.

Others say the attacks only strengthen Fox.

“This is an effort in effect to quarantine Fox News and to discourage other media outlets from picking up on stories that originate here,” Fox Washington Bureau Chief Brit Hume said on “The O’Reilly Factor.” “My guess is it won’t work….Look at Glenn Beck, he’s having a field day with this.”

At least one prominent Washington journalist publicly embraced the White House’s anti-Fox crusade, Politico reports.

“By appearing on Fox, reporters validate its propaganda values and help to undermine the role of legitimate news organizations,” former Slate editor Jacob Weisberg wrote in Newsweek. “Respectable journalists—I’m talking to you Mara Liasson—should stop appearing on its programs.”

Liasson, a National Public Radio reporter who is a regular on Fox News’s “Special Report,” did not respond to an e-mail seeking comment.

On the other hand, the lone voice fighting for the press seems to be ABC’s Jake Tapper.

“It’s escaped none of our notice that the White House has decided in the last few weeks to declare one of our sister organizations “not a news organization” and to tell the rest of us not to treat them like a news organization,” Tapper confronted White House Spokesman Robert Gibbs. “Can you explain why it’s appropriate for the White House to decide that a news organization is not one.”

MediaMatters.org reported that Tapper seemed “completely baffled and quite insulted” by the administration’s stance toward Fox in Jake Tapper can’t figure out how Fox News is different from ABC News?

Of course, Media Matters is more interested in tearing down Conservative outlets like Fox. But what Eric Boehlert seems not to notice is Tapper’s lone stand against the Administration is focused more on who gets to define who is and isn’t a news outlet - a fundamental 1st amendment issue:

Tapper: I’m not talking about their opinion programming or issues you have with certain reports. I’m talking about saying thousands of individuals who work for a media organization, do not work for a “news organization” — why is that appropriate for the White House to say?

Gibbs: That’s our opinion.

And the Administration’s opinion is also that other organizations should shun and discredit Fox News because the Administration doesn’t agree with those opinions - as stated recently by senior advisor David Axelrod and Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel.

If We Break that Promise, We’ll Make Another One

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

Originated from Statehousecall.org

By King Banaian

He said,

Reducing the waste and inefficiency in Medicare and Medicaid will pay for most of this plan.

And if we don’t pass this plan, does he intend to keep the waste and inefficiency, out of spite?

Arnold Kling, late last night. And he said “there will be a provision in this plan that requires us to [find] more spending cuts if the savings we promised don’t materialize.” Translation: If we break that promise, we’ll make another one.

Many people asked wherein the 46-to-30 million reduction in the number of uninsured came from. I saw the answer first via Jake Tapper on Twitter. That number itself may be too high yet, but it’s progress. (Yes, folks, I saw that Census report this morning, but it includes the two groups the White House is now excluding.)

See also a fact check: Those are two very brave AP reporters who are probably working on their resumes this morning…

Though there’s no final plan yet, the White House and congressional Democrats already have shown they’re ready to skirt the no-new-deficits pledge.

“New suit, emperor?”

(Republished from SCSU Scholars)

The perfect storm: Health care reform town hall riots

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009
Nate Beeler - The Washington Examiner

Nate Beeler - The Washington Examiner

Are we as a nation really ready to throw elbows over health care reform?

Take a media desperate for news, activists on both sides coached from confrontational playbooks, and an issue too close to call, and you have the perfect recipe for what might become known as the month of the town hall riots.

So far, the media has eaten up the story line that mobs of right wing-nuts are being bussed in by corporate interests to emulate grass roots opposition to health care reform.

The Hill’s Mike Soraghan exemplified the unverified claim that opposition demonstrators have been somehow funded by corporate and conservative interests.

The combined effort comes after numerous Democratic lawmakers across the country have been shouted down at town hall meetings by protesters, some of whom are getting help from conservative and business groups.

Soraghan, like many reporters, offers no proof, but his contention has quickly become the media line for the first half of August.

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer went so far as to call the protests “un-American” in a USA Today Op-Ed piece today.

“Americans have been waiting for nearly a century for quality, affordable health care,” the pair claim. In their view, the opposition just wants to drown out “those who wanted to hold a substantive discussion.”

Their attack on the democratic process caused the White House to distance the administration from that characterization of the opposition, according to ABC News‘ Jake Tapper.

“I think there’s actually a pretty long tradition of people shouting at politicians in America,” administration spokesman Bill Burton told reporters on Air Force One.

Meanwhile, the right has tried to make hay over falling support of government run health care.

Rasmussen reports Obama’s “good or excellent” rating as a leader has fallen to 45 percent, down 19 points from his inauguration in January.

Conservative blog Stop the ACLU jumped on the numbers, declaring “Rasmussen must be Unamarican too.”

And polls have shown a similar slip in support for a public health care option, down to just under 50 percent, depending on which poll you read. Rasmussen has support for a single-payer system (slightly to the left of ‘public option’ on the socialism scale) at 32 percent, opposition at 57 points.

Healthcare reform deadline continues to slide

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

Last month, HealthcareHorserace.com reported on a seemingly innocuous reporting gaffe by the Washington Post’s Ceci Connolly which alluded to the White House backing off on a publicly declared October deadline for healthcare reform. 

Multiple sources - including The Washington Post’s Ceci Connolly and ABC News‘ Jake Tapper - have attributed the following quote to President Obama in stories on healthcare reform and an agreement reached with drug companies to drastically reduce the costs of prescriptions for seniors.

“The agreement reached today to lower prescription drug costs for seniors will be an important part of the legislation I expect to sign into law in December,” Obama said in a statement this afternoon. “This is a tangible example of the type of reform that will lower costs while assuring quality health care for every American.”

We’ve kept an eye on this story over the past few weeks and while it appears the original gaffe may fall solely on the shoulders of Connolly (as evidenced by Karl Hille’s Policing their own - ’silly’ WaPo reporter takes the heat) and was little more than lazy reporting on the part of Tapper, all indications are that the healthcare reform deadline continues to slide.

Over the weekend, Republican Senator Chuck Grassley - the ranking member on the Senate Finance Committee - appeared alongside Democrat senator Chuck Schumer on CBS News’ Face the Nation and discussed, among other things, the realities of getting a bill in front of President Obama before the October deadline. While both senators did their best to sound optimistic, it is all too easy to read between the lines.

GRASSLEY: Well, I think Senator Schumer doesn’t want to go too far on pushing the federal government being more involved in cooperatives because, you see, this is a very difficult situation. And it’s more of a political problem than it is a health care problem, I hope I’ve demonstrated.

And I think, if we can reach a compromise, we can get this done by August the 8th, or at least get it out of committee by August the 8th.

SCHUMER: Well, I think we can get it — I think we can get it done by August 8th. But we have to meet in the middle. I don’t think you can take things off the table altogether. We need something to keep the insurance companies honest. 

(Transcript compliments of CQ Politics)

The much talked about public option insurance plan continues to be the single most polarizing issue of the healthcare reform debate - even more of a deal-breaker than the various financing mechanisms being tossed around on Capitol Hill. Reaching a compromise on this issue (in any of the five bills currently proposed between the House and Senate) over the next five weeks and an August 8th deadline necessary for the House and Senate to reconcile their respective reform bills seems highly unlikely.

Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), managing the health care bill in the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, signaled late last week that Democratic leaders do not expect a bill to clear the Senate in the next five weeks. Rather, Dodd indicated, the goal is to complete the tricky merger of the HELP and Finance Committee bills, with the floor fracas over a final bill put off until after Labor Day.

“One step at a time,” Dodd said Thursday during a conference call with reporters. “This is a long process.” (Taken from Roll Call)

Add in the fact that next week marks the beginning of confirmation hearings for Obama’s first Supreme Court nominee, Judge Sonia Sotomayor, and it looks like the healthcare debate will carry on long into the autumn if not longer.

President Obama defends public option insurance plan

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Earlier this afternoon, the media had its first opportunity to question President Obama on healthcare reform after a tumultuous week on Capitol Hill that saw Democrats retreat behind closed doors when the Congressional Budget Office torpedoed Senator Kennedy’s Affordable Health Choices Act, Senator Baucus scrapped draft legislation in the Senate Finance Committee and key Democrats - including California’s Dianne Feinstein - broke ranks and vowed to defeat some of the proposals currently on the table.

Sadly, none of the reporters present - including Jake Tapper who we called out in yesterday’s Media Gaffe Reveals Healthcare Reform Pushed Back to December - failed to follow up on the President’s new December deadline (unless it is still October) for healthcare reform. HealthcareHorserace.com continues to investigate this story and will give our readers some clarification as soon as we know more.

The two rounds of questions that were put to the President on healthcare (which wasn’t bad considering this was also the first time the media got to question the President on Iran) focused on the highly controversial public option insurance plan proposed by Democrats and the ability of private insurers to compete with the government in the market place.

The first round of questions came from USA Today’s David Jackson.

Q Thank you, Mr. President. Two of the key players in the insurance industry, America’s Health Insurance Plans and Blue Cross-Blue Shield, sent a letter to the Senate this morning saying that a government health insurance plan would “dismantle” private insurers. Why are they wrong? And secondly, this public plan, is this non-negotiable? Would you sign a health care bill without it?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, let’s talk first of all about health care reform more broadly.

I think in this debate there’s been some notion that if we just stand pat we’re okay. And that’s just not true. You know, there are polls out that show that 70 or 80 percent of Americans are satisfied with the health insurance that they currently have. The only problem is that premiums have been doubling every nine years, going up three times faster than wages. The U.S. government is not going to be able to afford Medicare and Medicaid on its current trajectory. Businesses are having to make very tough decisions about whether we drop coverage or we further restrict coverage.

So the notion that somehow we can just keep on doing what we’re doing and that’s okay, that’s just not true. We have a longstanding critical problem in our health care system that is pulling down our economy, it’s burdening families, it’s burdening businesses, and it is the primary driver of our federal deficits. All right?

So if we start from the premise that the status quo is unacceptable, then that means we’re going to have to bring about some serious changes. What I’ve said is, our top priority has to be to control costs. And that means not just tinkering around the edges. It doesn’t mean just lopping off reimbursements for doctors in any given year because we’re trying to fix our budget. It means that we look at the kinds of incentives that exist, what our delivery system is like, why it is that some communities are spending 30 percent less than other communities but getting better health care outcomes, and figuring out how can we make sure that everybody is benefiting from lower costs and better quality by improving practices. It means health IT. It means prevention.

So all these things are the starting point, I think, for reform. And I’ve said very clearly: If any bill arrives from Congress that is not controlling costs, that’s not a bill I can support. It’s going to have to control costs. It’s going to have to be paid for. So there’s been a lot of talk about, well, a trillion-dollar price tag. What I’ve said is, if we’re going to spend that much money, then it’s going to be largely funded through reallocating dollars that are already in the health care system but aren’t being spent well. If we’re spending $177 billion over 10 years to subsidize insurance companies under Medicare Advantage, when there’s no showing that people are healthier using that program than the regular Medicare program, well, that’s not a good deal for taxpayers. And we’re going to take that money and we’re going to use it to provide better care at a cheaper cost to the American people. So that’s point number one.

Number two, while we are in the process of dealing with the cost issue, I think it’s also wise policy and the right thing to do to start providing coverage for people who don’t have health insurance or are underinsured, are paying a lot of money for high deductibles. I get letters — two, three letters a day — that I read of families who don’t have health insurance, are going bankrupt, are on the brink of losing their insurance; have deductibles that are so high that even with insurance they end up with $50,000, $100,000 worth of debt; are at risk of losing their homes.

And that has to be part of reform, making sure that even if you’ve got health insurance now, you are not worried that when you lose your job or your employer decides to change policies that somehow you’re going to be out of luck. I think about the woman who was in Wisconsin that I was with, who introduced me up in Green Bay — 36 years old, double mastectomy; breast cancer has now moved to her bones and she’s got two little kids, a husband with a job. They had health insurance, but they’re still $50,000 in debt, and she’s thinking, my main legacy, if I don’t survive this thing, is going to be leaving $100,000 worth of debt. So those are the things that I’m prioritizing.

Now, the public plan I think is a important tool to discipline insurance companies. What we’ve said is, under our proposal, let’s have a system the same way that federal employees do, same way that members of Congress do, where — we call it an “exchange,” or you can call it a “marketplace” — where essentially you’ve got a whole bunch of different plans. If you like your plan and you like your doctor, you won’t have to do a thing. You keep your plan. You keep your doctor. If your employer is providing you good health insurance, terrific, we’re not going to mess with it.

But if you’re a small business person, if the insurance that’s being offered is something you can’t afford, if you want to shop for a better price, then you can go to this exchange, this marketplace, and you can look: Okay, this is how much this plan costs, this is how much that plan costs, this is what the coverage is like, this is what fits for my family. As one of those options, for us to be able to say, here’s a public option that’s not profit-driven, that can keep down administrative costs and that provides you good, quality care for a reasonable price — as one of the options for you to choose, I think that makes sense.

Q Won’t that drive private insurers out of business?

THE PRESIDENT: Why would it drive private insurers out of business? If private insurers say that the marketplace provides the best quality health care, if they tell us that they’re offering a good deal, then why is it that the government — which they say can’t run anything — suddenly is going to drive them out of business? That’s not logical.

Now, I think that there’s going to be some healthy debates in Congress about the shape that this takes. I think there can be some legitimate concerns on the part of private insurers that if any public plan is simply being subsidized by taxpayers endlessly, that over time they can’t compete with the government just printing money.

So there are going to be some I think legitimate debates to be had about how this private plan takes shape. But just conceptually, the notion that all these insurance companies who say they’re giving consumers the best possible deal, that they can’t compete against a public plan as one option, with consumers making the decision what’s the best deal. That defies logic, which is why I think you’ve seen in the polling data overwhelming support for a public plan. All right?

Q Is that non-negotiable?

(Ed Note: The President decided not to answer this question and moved on to another reporter.)

Later in the press conference, Jake Tapper from ABC News (a name you may recall from yesterday’s Media Gaffe Reveals Healthcare Reform Pushed Back to December) returned the conversation to healthcare reform.

Jake Tapper.

Q Thank you, Mr. President. Before I ask my question, I’m wondering if you could actually answer David’s. Is the public plan non-negotiable?

THE PRESIDENT: That’s your question. (Laughter.)

Q Well, you didn’t answer –

THE PRESIDENT: You think you’re going to — are you the ombudsman for the White House press corps? (Laughter.) What’s your — is that your question? (Laughter.)

Q Then I have a two-part question. (Laughter.) Is the public plan non-negotiable? And while I appreciate your Spock-like language about the logic of the health care plan, the public plan, it does seem logical to a lot of people that if the government is offering a cheaper health care plan, then lots of employers will want to have their employees covered by that cheaper plan, which will not have to be for profit, unlike private plans, and may possibly benefit from some government subsidies, who knows. And then their employees would be signed up for this public plan, which would violate what you’re promising the American people, that they will not have to change health care plans if they like the plan they have.

THE PRESIDENT: I got you. You’re pitching, I’m catching. I got the question. First of all, was the reference to Spock — is that a crack on my ears? (Laughter.) All right, I just want to make sure. No?

Q I would never make fun of your ears, sir. (Laughter.)

THE PRESIDENT: In answer to David’s question, which you co-opted, we are still early in this process, so we have not drawn lines in the sand other than that reform has to control costs and that it has to provide relief to people who don’t have health insurance or are underinsured. Those are the broad parameters that we’ve discussed.

There are a whole host of other issues where ultimately I may have a strong opinion, and I will express those to members of Congress as this is shaping up. It’s too early to say that. Right now I will say that our position is that a public plan makes sense.

Now, let me go to the broader question you made about the public plan. As I said before, I think that there is a legitimate concern if the public plan was simply eating off the taxpayer trough, that it would be hard for private insurers to complete. If, on the other hand, the public plan is structured in such a way where they’ve got to collect premiums and they’ve got to provide good services, then if what the insurance companies are saying is true, that they’re doing their best to serve their customers, that they’re in the business of keeping people well and giving them security when they get sick, they should be able to compete.

Now, if it turns out that the public plan, for example, is able to reduce administrative costs significantly, then you know what? I’d like insurance companies to take note and say, hey, if the public plan can do that, why can’t we? And that’s good for everybody in the system. And I don’t think there should be any objection to that.

Now, by the way, I should point out that part of the reform that we’ve suggested is that if you want to be a private insurer as part of the exchange, as part of this marketplace, this menu of options that people can choose from, we’re going to have some different rules for all insurance companies — one of them being that you can’t preclude people from getting health insurance because of a pre-existing condition, you can’t cherry pick and just take the healthiest people.

So there are going to be some ground rules that are going to apply to all insurance companies, because I think the American people understand that, too often, insurance companies have been spending more time thinking about how to take premiums and then avoid providing people coverage than they have been thinking about how can we make sure that insurance is there, health care is there when families need it.

But I’m confident that if — I take those advocates of the free market to heart when they say that the free market is innovative and is going to compete on service and is going to compete on their ability to deliver good care to families. And if that’s the case then this just becomes one more option. If it’s not the case then I think that that’s something that the American people should know.

Q I’m sorry, but what about keeping your promise to the American people that they won’t have to change plans even if employers –

THE PRESIDENT: Well, no, no, I mean — when I say if you have your plan and you like it and your doctor has a plan, or you have a doctor and you like your doctor that you don’t have to change plans, what I’m saying is the government is not going to make you change plans under health reform.

Now, are there going to be employers right now — assuming we don’t do anything — let’s say that we take the advice of some folks who are out there and say, oh, this is not the time to do health care, we can’t afford it, it’s too complicated, let’s take our time, et cetera. So let’s assume that nothing happened. I can guarantee you that there’s a possibility for a whole lot of Americans out there that they’re not going to end up having the same health care they have, because what’s going to happen is, as costs keep on going up, employers are going to start making decisions: We’ve got to raise premiums on our employees; in some cases, we can’t provide health insurance at all.

And so there are going to be a whole set of changes out there. That’s exactly why health reform is so important.

In his remarks, the President offered up many of the same things he’s been saying about healthcare reform from the get go, but we now have some context to analyze these statements in. 

I’ve said very clearly: If any bill arrives from Congress that is not controlling costs, that’s not a bill I can support. It’s going to have to control costs. It’s going to have to be paid for. So there’s been a lot of talk about, well, a trillion-dollar price tag. What I’ve said is, if we’re going to spend that much money, then it’s going to be largely funded through reallocating dollars that are already in the health care system but aren’t being spent well.

Translation: I’ve made it clear to Congress that the more money they want to spend on healthcare reform, the more they’re going to need to raise taxes on people. 

The President is a politically astute man. It has become clear over the past week that Congress faces two distinct options when it comes to healthcare reform. First, they can try to devise legislation that provides universal access to healthcare in America. The price tag on this will be in excess of $1.6 trillion according to CBO estimates of which less than half can currently be payed for by “reallocating dollars that are already in the health care system but aren’t being spent well” as the President suggests. 

This is going to mean massive cuts to existing federal programs like Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP (Children’s Health Insurance Program) and the Veteran’s Health Administration. It also means massive taxes levied on employers and individuals to cover the policies of those who cannot afford them. The Democrat talking point on this is “You’re going to feel a little pain.” The reality is that pursuing universal healthcare is going to be more like losing a limb.

Option two for Congressional Democrats is proposing legislation that they can afford. The conventional wisdom is that the price tag Congress can cover is about $1 trillion over ten years. According to CBO estimates of current Democrat proposals, this means insuring approximately 16 million of the 46 million currently without health insurance in this country.

Either option is politically unacceptable with the voting public and President Obama knows this. As we’ve seen with his handling of the situation in Iran, this President is all too happy to make big promises and leave the heavy-lifting and consequences to others.

Next, lets look at President Obama’s thoughts on government intervention into the free market.

Why would it drive private insurers out of business? If private insurers say that the marketplace provides the best quality health care, if they tell us that they’re offering a good deal, then why is it that the government — which they say can’t run anything — suddenly is going to drive them out of business? That’s not logical.

Now, I think that there’s going to be some healthy debates in Congress about the shape that this takes. I think there can be some legitimate concerns on the part of private insurers that if any public plan is simply being subsidized by taxpayers endlessly, that over time they can’t compete with the government just printing money.

So there are going to be some I think legitimate debates to be had about how this private plan takes shape. But just conceptually, the notion that all these insurance companies who say they’re giving consumers the best possible deal, that they can’t compete against a public plan as one option, with consumers making the decision what’s the best deal. That defies logic, which is why I think you’ve seen in the polling data overwhelming support for a public plan. All right?

Translation: I got your free market right here pal!

The President is making a politically smart play here and, once again, putting the onus on Congress if the public option does in fact drive America into a single-payer healthcare insurance system. 

We all know that (logically) the free market will always prevail over government agencies on a level playing field. So, the President is challenging the free market economy to do so. A fair challenge if anyone thought the government was going to play fair on this one. As the President preemptively points out, the biggest fear is a public option insurance plan with a blank check and a mandate with no budgetary restrictions. That is the worst case scenario and the equivalent of you or I starting a software company in our garage to compete directly with Microsoft. The little guy is going to lose every time. President Obama promises that this is not the plan.

So kudos to the President for a hand well played here. The only way to challenge him on this one is to go back to the future and call the man a liar. We’re going to hold off on that one for the time being.

The next quote from the news conference is perhaps the most interesting.

So there are going to be some ground rules that are going to apply to all insurance companies, because I think the American people understand that, too often, insurance companies have been spending more time thinking about how to take premiums and then avoid providing people coverage than they have been thinking about how can we make sure that insurance is there, health care is there when families need it.

But I’m confident that if — I take those advocates of the free market to heart when they say that the free market is innovative and is going to compete on service and is going to compete on their ability to deliver good care to families. And if that’s the case then this just becomes one more option. If it’s not the case then I think that that’s something that the American people should know.

Translation: Insurance companies cannot be trusted so we’re going to either get them to run themselves the way we think they should or drive them into the ground.

I’m reminded of Bill Clinton and the definition of “is.” President Obama clearly calls for some “ground rules that are going to apply to all insurance companies.” This leads us to a very important question about the proposed public option insurance plan. Will this plan be a government program, a government agency, or a for-profit corporation (aka an insurance company)?

If Democrats propose legislation that further regulates for-profit insurance companies but exempts the public option plan as a non-profit or government entity whose mission is to provide healthcare insurance for those who are under-served by or cannot afford private insurance, this is a not-so-thinly-veiled prescription for unfair competition and the very single-payer system the President has guaranteed is not on the table.

Only time will tell what’s in store as the Democrats continue their push for healthcare reform, but be sure that HealthcareHorserace.com will be here to keep you in the know as the race unfolds.

Media Gaffe Reveals Healthcare Reform Pushed Back to December

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

After a rough week for Democrats attempting to radically reform the American healthcare system, Obamacare has been dealt yet another blow by one of its closest allies - the mainstream media. Has President Obama given up on an October deadline for healthcare reform?

Multiple sources - including The Washington Post’s Ceci Connolly and ABC News‘ Jake Tapper - have attributed the following quote to President Obama in stories on healthcare reform and an agreement reached with drug companies to drastically reduce the costs of prescriptions for seniors.

“The agreement reached today to lower prescription drug costs for seniors will be an important part of the legislation I expect to sign into law in December,” Obama said in a statement this afternoon. “This is a tangible example of the type of reform that will lower costs while assuring quality health care for every American.”

These reporters clearly paraphrase the following quote currently posted in the Briefing Room section of WhiteHouse.gov.

“The agreement reached today to lower prescription drug costs for seniors will be an important part of the legislation I expect to sign into law in October. I want to commend House chairmen Henry Waxman, George Miller and Charles Rangel for addressing this issue in the health reform legislation they unveiled this week. This is a tangible example of the type of reform that will lower costs while assuring quality health care for every American”.

So, why does the White House statement say October where the media has been reporting December for several days now?

Was this a case of lazy reporting where one source misquoted the White House press release? Did the White House share an internal decision with the wrong journalists? Did the White House issue and then reissue a redacted press statement from the President?

HealthcareHorserace.com continues to seek the facts behind this potential reporting gaffe by ABC News and The Washington Post. We should point out however that Connolly and Tapper are seasoned Washington journalists which makes it incredibly unlikely the gaffe was theirs.

One thing we do know is that given the events of past week - which included a Congressional Budget Office report tearing apart Ted Kennedy’s Affordable Health Choices Act; a decision by Max Baucus to table draft healthcare reform legislation in the Senate Finance Committee; and liberal California Senator Dianne Feinstein coming out against the current legislative thinking behind Obamacare - an October deadline is looking less realistic by the day.

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