Articles Tagged ‘Max Baucus’

S.C. Democrat: ‘Cadillac Tax’ Violates Obama’s Promise

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

Representative James Clayburn, a Democrat from South Carolina, is expressing reservations about the “excise” tax on so-called Cadillac healthcare plans currently in the Senate’s version of Obamacare.

Clayburn, the House Democratic Whip, said that this excise tax violated Obama’s pledge not to raise taxes on the middle class.

“I do not want to see anything jeopardize the president’s promise not to raise taxes on the middle-class,” Clyburn told MSNBC. “And that could very well get us there.”

Clayburn joins Big Unions in denouncing the tax plan as an attack on the middle class.

The high-end healthcare excise tax plan in the Senate’s Baucus bill is supposed to be levied on insurance companies, but it is clear that these taxes will be passed on to consumers in the form of higher premiums. And then only if insurance companies even bother to offer such high-end plans to tax in the first place.

In place of the tax on Cadillac plans in the Senate bill, the House plan would penalize taxpaying families with a combined income of $1 million annually and individuals that earn more than $500,000 a year.

AP: Labor Unions Ready to Fire on Baucus Bill

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

The Associated Press confirms what healthcarehorserace.com reported Wednesday: top unions are ready to launch an attack on Sen. Baucus (D-MT) and his health care reform bill that passed out of the Senate Committee on Finance today:

WASHINGTON — A top labor lobbyist says about 30 unions will run a full-page ad in newspapers Wednesday announcing their opposition to the Senate Finance Committee’s health overhaul bill.

 

The ad says that unless the bill brought to the Senate floor makes substantial progress to address the concerns of working men and women, unions will oppose it.

 

The legislative director of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, Chuck Loveless, says unions are unhappy that the legislation lacks a publicly run insurance plan and would tax insurers that provide expensive coverage.


Sponsors included the AFL-CIO and the Communications Workers of America. The ad will run in The Washington Post, USA Today and Capitol Hill newspapers.

BREAKING: BAUCUS BILL UPDATES

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

UPDATE 3:03 P.M. EASTERN- VOTE TALLIES:

Republican
CHUCK GRASSLEY -no
ORRIN G. HATCH -no
OLYMPIA J. SNOWE -yes
JON KYL -no
JIM BUNNING -no
MIKE CRAPO -no
PAT ROBERTS -no
JOHN ENSIGN -no
MIKE ENZI -no
JOHN CORNYN -no

Democrat
MAX BAUCUS -yes
JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER -yes
KENT CONRAD -yes
JEFF BINGAMAN -yes
JOHN F. KERRY -yes
BLANCHE L. LINCOLN -yes
RON WYDEN -yes
CHARLES E. SCHUMER -yes
DEBBIE STABENOW -yes
MARIA CANTWELL -yes
BILL NELSON -yes
ROBERT MENENDEZ -yes
THOMAS CARPER -yes

Agreed to (14-9)

The Mark is ordered reported.

UPDATE: 1:03 P.M. EASTERN- SEN. OLYMPIA SNOWE (R-ME) WILL VOTE “YES” ON BAUCUS BILL.

In what Sen. Max Baucus (D-MT), chairman of Senate Committee on Finance, calls an opportunity to “make history” by satisfying President Barack Obama’s top domestic priority, his bill will be up for vote around noon Tuesday to determine the future of the health care reform agenda of the White House and Congressional progressives.

Stay tuned to healthcarehorserace.com for the latest breaking news as the votes are tallied and the White House, Congress and the public respond.

HuffPo: Baucus to Blame for Health Care Overhaul Failings

Monday, October 12th, 2009

A recent blog entry at the Huffington Post highlights the progressives’ criticism of Senate Committee on Finance Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) for the failings of the liberal health care reform agenda.

Blogger Chris Weigant complains that Sen. Baucus is responsible as being “almost as obstructionist as the Republicans in getting to the point we are at now. Meaning he is responsible for the dwindling amount of time we have left to get healthcare reform passed this year.” Indeed, this has been a common grievance of the far Left: leading Democratic lawmakers are to blame for not utilizing a hefty majority to make their dreams of a single-payer, universal health care system a reality.

Weigant worries that there is simply not enough time left in the legislative calendar to ensure the passage of an adequate, sweeping government plan that would overhaul the health care industry:

There are only two and a half months left in Congress’ legislative year. In this short period of time, Congress usually takes enormous chunks of time off for Thanksgiving and Christmas. So there just aren’t that many weeks left to pull this thing together. Reid, to his credit, has already cancelled a Senate week off for Columbus Day, but cancelling Thanksgiving and Christmas is a whole different ball of wax.

Weigant’s assessment is correct. There are plenty of procedural speed bumps that would mean that even if the bill is deemed favorable by a majority of Congress, an unlikely fate at best,  the unavoidable legislative route would take plenty long enough and could disrupt Leftists’ ambitions for a speedy takeover.

The article isn’t shy about pointing the finger at Sen. Baucus, ultimately blaming the Finance Committee chair for what seems to be a likely doom for the hopes of progressives everywhere, thanks in part, Weigant argues, for his attempts at bipartisanship:

But whatever the chances are, and however it is handled by the congressional leadership, the point is we just wasted two and a half months. And by “we,” I mean “Senator Max Baucus.” Before August happened, the talk was all of “bipartisanship” (ah, those naive days of early summer…) and the “Gang of Six,” who were going to hammer out a bill that lots of Republicans would vote for. By the end of August, the Republicans were all but smirking into their sleeves on national television saying: “We were never going to vote for anything that would help Obama politically, and we just burned up a month proving that to the Democrats.”

But then, even after we got to that point, we then sat through another month and a half of delay. And that delay can be laid at the feet of Max Baucus. Is the bill the Finance Committee going to vote on tomorrow substantially different than what they had at the beginning of September? No, it is not. Is it substantially better? No, it is not. Is it going to win over any Republican votes (other than, perhaps, Olympia Snowe)? No, it is not. Were those six weeks wasted? Yes, they were.

Which gave time for the healthcare industry to mobilize against Baucus’ bill. Meaning Baucus is largely responsible for the attack coming now.

And while the far Left is busy demonizing Sen. Baucus, it’s pretty certain that the majority of American people are exhaling a large sigh of relief, thankful that the bill, as bad as it is now, is at least somewhat better than the deepest held hopes of progressives: a complete and utter destruction of the private sector to level the playing field by making health care equally as awful for everyone.

msbye6vhiq

AHIP: Reform will add $4,000 per year to health care premiums

Monday, October 12th, 2009

As the Senate Finance Committee prepares for a Tuesday vote on health care reform legislation, the private insurance trade group under the America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) has gone on the offensive saying Max Baucus‘ America’s Healthy Future Act would actually escalate the already skyrocketing rise in health insurance premiums. In a report issued by PriceWaterHouseCoopers and commissioned by AHIP, researchers found that insurance premiums could go up by as much $4,000 per year (an 111-percent increase) if Congress adopts the plan now know as BaucusCare versus a 79-percent increase if no reforms are adopted.

Key Findings

Health reform could have a significant impact on the cost of private health insurance
coverage.

There are four provisions included in the Senate Finance Committee proposal that could
increase private health insurance premiums above the levels projected under current law:
o Insurance market reforms coupled with a weak coverage requirement,
o A new tax on high-cost health care plans,
o Cost-shifting as a result of cuts to Medicare, and
o New taxes on several health care sectors.

The overall impact of these provisions will be to increase the cost of private insurance
coverage for individuals, families, and businesses above what these costs would be in
the absence of reform.

On average, the cost of private health insurance coverage will increase:
o 26 percent between 2009 and 2013 under the current system and by 40 percent
during this same period if these four provisions are implemented.
o 50 percent between 2009 and 2016 under the current system and by 73 percent
during this same period if these four provisions are implemented.
o 79 percent between 2009 and 2019 under the current system and by 111 percent
during this same period if these four provisions are implemented.

(From PriceWaterHouseCoopers’  Potential Impact of Health Reform on the
Cost of Private Health Insurance Coverage
)

The timing of this new report couldn’t be worse for the White House and Congressional Democrats as three key members of the Finance Committee - Democrats Kent Conrad and Blanche Lincoln along with Republican Olympia Snowe , have yet to announce their intended votes on the bill but have all expressed concern over the potential costs to consumers if Americans are forced to purchase health insurance via an individual mandate which is included in not only the Baucus bill but all five of the bills currently being considered on Capitol Hill.

“This is a self-serving analysis from the insurance industry, one of the major opponents of health insurance reform,” White House spokesman Reid Cherlin said. “It comes on the eve of a vote that will reduce the industry’s profits. It is hard to take it seriously,” he added. (From Reuters’ White House blasts health insurance sector report.)

Democrats Jay Rockefeller and Ron Wyden have also expressed concern that the Finance bill’s lack of a government-run public option insurance plan will leave tens of millions of Americans without an affordable insurance option should Baucus’ cooperatives approach to reform be adopted in a final Senate bill and have refused to throw their support behind the bill ahead of the vote.

If the Finance Committee fails to pass a bill out of committee during tomorrow’s vote - or the vote is postponed due to a lack of support, health care reform could very well be off the table for 2009.

Republican Governors Condemn Baucuscare

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Likely anticipating skyrocketed state liabilities, 14 out of the 28 Republican governors in the U.S. have sent letters to their respective Congressional delegations urging them to vote against the health care reform proposals of Sen. Max Baucus (D-MT).

According to an article from The Hill, the efforts of these GOP governors have been complemented by the active assistance of Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

Though Barbour coordinated the letter-writing effort among the governors, it is part of a larger initiative launched by House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) earlier this year to increase the outreach among state heads and congressional leaders. Sources say Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is also playing a leading role on this issue. 

Those Republican doctors who have not committed to writing critical letters are: “Charlie Crist (Fla.), Jodi Rell (Conn.), Tim Pawlenty (Minn.), Bob Riley (Ala.), Bobby Jindal (La.), John Hoeven (N.D.) and Jim Douglas (Vt.). Of these, Crist, Douglas and Rell were strong proponents of the stimulus package that was rejected by all but three Republicans in Congress.”

The main concern regarding Baucus care is the unprecedented financial burden it will place in the form of liabilities of the states:

GOP Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman told his delegation, including Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.), that that “this new unfunded federal Medicaid mandate could result in the higher taxes on Nebraskans or in cutting state aid to Nebraska’s school districts as well as state appropriations to our universities, state colleges and community colleges.” 

Nelson, a centrist, has refused to commit to voting with Democrats on procedural roll calls on healthcare reform legislation. If Nelson sided with Republicans, he would significantly increase the chances of a successful GOP filibuster.

Other Republican governors, including Haley Barbour (Miss.), Mitch Daniels (Ind.) and Rick Perry (Texas), echoed Heineman in letters they have recently sent to Capitol Hill. Governors from Hawaii, Arizona, Alaska, California, Rhode Island, South Carolina and others plan to follow suit before week’s end. 

Barbour, chairman of the Republican Governors Association (RGA), was the first to pen a “letter of concern” to lawmakers from his state. And it provided a template for others to follow.

While Democrats in the Senate claim that this program will be funded by the federal government and run by the states, many Republican governors are skeptical. 

“The current proposals, both in the House and Senate, will expand the Medicaid program at additional costs paid not by the federal government, but passed down to the states,” Barbour wrote earlier this month.

Republicans are touting an editorial in Monday’s Wall Street Journal titled, “Max’s Mad Mandate.” The op-ed called Baucus’s bill “the mother — and father and crazy uncle — of unfunded mandates.”

GOP governors are not the only ones who have voiced their criticisms: 

Democratic governors have raised concerns about the House healthcare bill, but some of them backtracked this summer. The Democratic governors, including Brian Schweitzer (Mont.) and Martin O’Malley (Md.), accused staff at the National Governors Association of giving them false information after a meeting with Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, according to a FoxNews.com report.

Senate Democrats Shield Constituents from Tax Burdens of Health Care Reform

Friday, October 9th, 2009

According to a report from Kimberly A. Strassel of the Wall Street Journal, some Senate Democrats have supported health care reform, so long as their own constituents don’t have to pay for it:

How good is Sen. Max Baucus’s health reform bill? So good that Democrats have made sure some of the most costly provisions don’t apply to their own states.

The Senate Finance Committee is gearing up for a final vote next week, and Chairman Baucus now appears to have the Democratic votes to pass his bill. Getting this far has of course meant cutting deals, and those deals, it turns out, are illuminating. The senators are all for imposing “reform” on the nation, so long as it doesn’t disadvantage their constituents.

A central feature of the Baucus bill is the vast expansion of state Medicaid programs. This is necessary, we are told, to cover more of the nation’s uninsured. The provision has angered governors, since the federal government will cover only part of the expansion and stick fiscally strapped states with an additional $37 billion in costs. The “states, with our financial challenges right now, are not in a position to accept additional Medicaid responsibilities,” griped Democratic Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland.

Poor Mr. Strickland. If only he lived in . . . Nevada! Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who is worried about losing his seat next year, worked out a deal by which the federal government will pay all of his home state’s additional Medicaid expenses for the next five years. Under the majority leader’s very special formula, only three other states—Oregon, Rhode Island and Michigan—qualify for this perk, on the grounds, as Mr. Reid put it recently on the Senate floor, that they “are suffering more than most.”

Tell that to Mr. Strickland, who is still trying to figure out how to close an $850 million budget hole, in a state with near 11% unemployment. And tell it to Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander, who quipped: “I wonder how citizens in Wyoming, in California and Florida and other states will feel if they pay more taxes so that Nevadans can pay less taxes.”

To pay the bill for his version of ObamaCare, Mr. Baucus’s legislation would tax high-value insurance plans—a 40% tax on plans that cost more than $21,000 a year. Democrats argue it is reform to make those who can afford “luxury” health care chip in for those who can’t afford any at all.

That is, unless you live in a state such as New York. That state, along with some others, has many high-value plans—in part because it boasts a lot of union members with “Cadillac” plans, in part because the state has imposed so many insurance regulations that even skimpy plans are expensive. Sen. Chuck Schumer didn’t want a lot of angry overtaxed New Yorkers on his hands, so he and other similarly situated Democrats carved out a deal by which the threshold for this tax will be higher in their states. If you live in Kentucky, you get taxed at $21,000. If you live in Massachusetts you don’t get taxed until $25,000. This carve-out is at least more sweeping, applying to 17 (largely blue) states, though that’s cold comfort if you live in Louisville.

Mr. Baucus will also pay for his bill by socking it to pharmaceutical companies, on the principle that drug companies are filthy rich and should have to contribute to health care. The view is a bit different in New Jersey. The state’s Web site boasts it is the “global epicenter” of the drug industry, where “15 of the world’s 20 largest pharmaceutical companies have major facilities.” And Sen. Bob Menendez, of the Garden State, seems concerned that his home-state employers are going to struggle to both pay their federal liabilities and to continue to grow and innovate. Thus Mr. Menendez’s quiet deal for a $1 billion tax credit for companies investing in drug R&D.

The Baucus bill, we are assured by many Dems, will successfully “bend down” the health-care cost curve. Michigan Sen. Debbie Stabenow isn’t counting on it when it comes to her constituents. She and Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry included $5 billion in the bill for a reinsurance program designed to defray the medical costs of union members.

“This will help our employers, whether it’s the auto industry or whether it’s other industries, be able to lower their costs for early retirees,” said Ms. Stabenow. She is apparently unaware that this is what the broader bill is supposed to do, even without $5 billion in union slush money.

So, health-care “reform” is good, smart and necessary, so long as it isn’t fully applied to the states of the senators who are pushing it. The Democrats’ growing problem is that somebody is ultimately going to have to pay, and Mr. Reid’s bad example has given every one the same idea. “If Colorado has a fair claim on being treated the same way Nevada has been, of course we’re going to ask to have that kind of treatment,” promised Sen. Mark Udall, upon news of the Reid deal.

Most senators are saving up their special state demands for when the bill hits the Senate floor. At that point, we’ll get an even better idea of how much health-care change Democrats truly believe in.

Women, health care reform and 2010 …

Friday, October 9th, 2009

Soccer moms … Security moms … Health care moms?

If Democrats in Congress have their way, health care moms may be the buzz word of the 2010 midterm elections. As Democrats scramble to find a way to rationalize poll numbers that show Americans soundly rejecting the idea of government-run health care but split on reform in general, making reform a women’s issue could prove the solution to voting for an unpopular bill and retaining a Democrat majority in Congress in next year’s elections.

Nearly ninety-years after passage of the Nineteenth Amendment guaranteed women the right to vote, women have become a powerful voting bloc in American politics. President Obama’s landslide election in 2008 was in no small part due to his ability to carry 56-percent of the female vote (according to exit polls) in contrast to Republican John McCain’s 43-percent support from women voters. Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush are said to owe their elections to soccer moms and security moms, respectively. So, could Democrats use health care moms to secure reform in 2009 and win re-election in 2010?

Yesterday, the women of the Democrat Party took to the floor of the United States Senate to make the case that a vote against health care reform is a vote against women. They related stories of women being unfairly treated by a health care system that seemingly discriminates against women’s health issues and called upon members of both parties to support American women by voting “yes” on health care reform. (Read the New York Times story “Democratic Women in Senate Speak on Behalf of Health Legislation“.)

Discriminatory practices in our health care system disproportionately affect women. And in all but 12 states, insurance companies are allowed to charge women more than they charge men for coverage. The great irony here is that mothers, the people who care for us when we’re sick, are penalized under our current system. (Democrat Senator Kay Hagan.)

In a now infamous exchange during the Senate Finance Committee debate on Max Baucus‘ America’s Healthy Future Act, Republican Jon Kyl incurred the wrath of Democrat Debbie Stabenow over whether including maternity care in health care reform would drive up the costs of insurance for men.

“I don’t need maternity care,” Mr. Kyl said. “And so requiring that to be in my insurance policy is something that I don’t need and will make the policy more expensive.”

Ms. Stabenow interjected: “I think your mom probably did.”

Three of the most significant votes in the Senate - moderate Republicans Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins and Democrat Blanche Lincoln, belong to women with Snowe and Lincoln reportedly undecided on how they will vote in next week’s Finance Committee showdown over health care reform.

Tying health care reform to women - and perhaps more importantly to their ability to care for their children, could be a winning strategy as Democrats try to unite their own party on health care reform and force the hands of Republican women who don’t want to look disconnected from the constituencies at a time when the nation is split on health care reform.

Labor Unions Plan Advertising Assault on Baucus; Demand Employer Mandate

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

The United Auto Workers and Teamsters have partnered to publicly oppose health care legislation proposed by Sen. Max Baucus (D-MT), claiming the bill to be “deeply flawed.” They have begun to develop an advertisement that criticizes the plan of Sen. Baucus and outlines what they believe is essential to achieving true reform.

The advertisement issues three key demands:

  1. A public option.
  2. Employer mandate.
  3. Elimination of a proposed tax on high-end health plans.

Ryan Ellis, policy director at Americans for Tax Reform, offered healthcarehorserace.com a glimpse into why he believes the Teamsters and UAW have come out in favor of such a government overhaul of the health care industry and why he “wouldn’t be surprised if other unions followed suit”: 

re: 1. A public option. According to Ellis, the public option is not so much a threat to labor unions if there is an employer mandate imposed on businesses (see re: 2). So, labor unions, like the UAW and Teamsters, can appear to be in favor of earnest reform, regardless of whether it’s true or not, in order to convince Americans that their hearts are true, without being detrimental to their true intention which is…

re: 2. Employer mandate. An employer mandate would require businesses to extend health insurance benefits to all employees or face a severe penalty. According to Ellis, the public option is only acceptable if an employer mandate exists. “Unions know that if you put a public option without an employer mandate, then employers would simply send their employees to the public option,” he explains. “Employer mandates put the unions in good positions to negotiate the best deals possible.”

re: 3. Elimination of a proposed tax on high-end health plans. As it stands now, Sen. Baucus’ plan taxes “Cadillac” health plans, where those whose employer provides more than $8,000 per person or $21,000 per family of coverage annually will be taxed at 40 percent for every extra dollar. The unions oppose this, as Ellis points out, because their control over workers comes from their ability to exchange union dues for cushy health care plans. If the tax on high-end plans exists, then there is less of an incentive for employers to provide luxurious plans, making it difficult for them to negotiate and in turn, provide less incentive for workers to unionize.

Bloomberg adds:

In addition to the autoworkers and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the proposed ad was sent to more than 30 unions. Among them were leaders of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the United Steel Workers, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, and the National Football League Players Association.

Reid: Finance Committee will vote on Baucus bill next Tuesday

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

A day after the Congressional Budget Office released its latest scoring of Finance chairman Max Baucus‘ effort at health care reform, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid announced that the Senate Finance Committee has scheduled a vote on the America’s Healthy Future Act when the Senate returns from Columbus Day weekend next Tuesday, October 13. While Democrats Kent Conrad and Blanche Lincoln have yet to announce whether they will vote in favor of the bill, the estimated price tag of  $829 billion is expected to be satisfactory to Democrats on the committee and put the bill in the hands of Reid in anticipation of a floor debate.

The Finance Committee bill is the only health care reform effort produced this year that has scored under President Obama’s declared veto threshold of $900 billion and is the only bill that does not include the politically charged government-run public option insurance plan. Both of those facts make it a favorite for approval by the United States Senate, but also set up a showdown between Senators and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi who earlier today promised that any bill passed by the House would include a public option.

Most pundits agree that a health care reform bill void of a public option will not garner the votes necessary to pass muster in the more liberal House Democrats. Yet, of the four public option driven bills currently being considered by Congress (three in the House alone), none have scored under $1 trillion dollars. Baucus’ cooperatives plan - which has drawn suspicion from conservatives for being a wolf in sheep’s clothing,  is therefore the best chance Democrats have of sending a reform bill to Obama’s desk in 2009 but is far from guaranteed to even make it out of the Senate.

Under the plan, 94 percent of Americans are expected to have health insurance by 2019 and revenues raised under the legislation - primarily through the introduction of new taxes, could actually reduce the budget by as much as $81 billion over the same time period.

  • According to CBO and JCT’s assessment, enacting the Chairman’s mark, as amended, would result in a net reduction in federal budget deficits of $81 billion over the 2010–2019 period.
  • By 2019, CBO and JCT estimate, the number of nonelderly people who are uninsured would be reduced by about 29 million, leaving about 25 million nonelderly residents uninsured (about one-third of whom would be unauthorized immigrants). (For the complete CBO analysis, click here.)

To the most liberal of Democrats, these cost savings come at the expense of approximately 16 million Americans (and another 8 million illegal immigrants) going without health insurance who they believe would be covered under a public option.To Republicans, the costs are too high to ensure too few and represent the single largest expansion of government entitlement programs in nearly four decades.

This is most likely why Reid has yet to back off of his threat to invoke the nuclear option of budget reconciliation should whip counts not provide the 60 votes he needs to get the bill through a full Senate floor debate. But, Reid has less than 48 hours after the Finance Committee votes to meet the October 15 deadline for invoking reconciliation. So, look for a Reid-authored Senate heath care reform bill to leak out well before the Finance Committee reconvenes next week.