Blog Watch

Posts Tagged ‘ahip’

Looking for More

 Bloggers continue to focus on the various facets of the health overhaul debate, in particular, that the Finance Committee bill needs additional funding.

Bob Laszewski pounds away at the Finance Committee bill, which he argues could “make access even more problematic” because of insufficient subsidies for middle-income families in the context of a weakened individual mandate.  Laszewski also takes time to blast AHIP for bad PR strategy, saying, “I swear, if AHIP issued a press release on a crystal clear day telling DC the sun was shining no one would believe them.”

Heritage’s Brian Darling is upset with reports that the health overhaul bills are being crafted “in secret:” “Democracy does not begin and end on Election Day for the American people. Whether you are for or against Obamacare, we the people deserve an opportunity to read, digest and understand the most important health care legislation to be debated in the United States Senate in our lifetime. The American people relied upon the promise of the Obama Administration and the leadership in Congress to be open and transparent, therefore it is time to stop the closed door negotiations and allow the American people to participate in the democratic process.”

Health Beat’s Maggie Mahar argues that insurers are “running scared” because “the public sector option is still alive.” With this point, she says she means “Medicare E (Medicare for everyone)” which she describes as “a public option for patients under 65, run by the federal government.  The scent of real competition is what has insurers on the run.”

Perhaps the public option is still breathing, but according to Hot Air’s Ed Morrissey, not because of much help from President Obama: “Is this leadership?  It’s a passive-aggressive approach that leaves both progressives and moderates in Obama’s own party twisting in the wind.  Obama wants his advisers to take all of the flak from progressive action groups that will result from a retreat on government-run health insurance, but doesn’t have the stomach to take that hit himself.  The end result is confusion among legislators on Capitol Hill, and further entrenchment on either side of the issue.”

The New Republic’s staff editorial argues that lawmakers’ “desire to expand health insurance coverage exceeds their willingness to pay for it,” and they need to find more money for the health bills but are running into roadblocks:

With so many ways to raise revenue, finding some combination capable of winning majorities in both chambers would seem simple. It isn’t. Liberals don’t like the insurance excise tax, in no small part because unions don’t want it affecting older workers who won generous benefits in past collective bargaining agreements. Centrists want no part of taxes outside the health care system, particularly those that target the wealthy. And neither group seems seriously interested in extracting more concessions from the health care industry, which may have a little something to do with the fact that it bankrolls so many political campaigns.

The Washington Post’s Ezra Klein uses an answer from Sen. Olympia Snowe to take a big picture look at health reform efforts this year, arguing, “We have a conservative system of government (in that it’s very hard to change the status quo), and [Democratic lawmakers] designed health-care reform to be sensitive to that fact.”

Mark Trahant looks at another issue in the health overhaul debate: an exemption for Indian Americans to the requirement to purchase insurance.  According to Trahant, “But even if you agree with the exemption – as I do – there remains another issue to resolve, the money. Unless health care reform substantially improves the funding stream for the Indian health care delivery system, then the individual exemption is only a guarantee of permanent disparity.”

Monday, October 19th, 2009

Anticipating The Finance Vote

nyt conversationsThe New York Times is inviting readers to start a conversation as the Senate Finance Commitee finally ends its own — members are scheduled to vote shortly on the committee’s health overhaul bill, the product of months-long negotiations and the last major congressional panel to take up reform.

The only committee member tweeting today is Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, who announces (unsurprisingly) “I will be voting against the Finance Committee health care bill today.”

Commentators are still buzzing about the insurance industry’s unexpected Sunday night report (pdf) saying the committee’s bill would significantly raise premiums.     

The Atlantic’s Marc Ambinder reports on the reaction: “Hoping to pop this trial balloon before it expands,  the White House and allies have counterpunched with an alacrity unfamiliar to Democrats. They’re first attacking the industry’s motives, which isn’t surprising. The Senate Finance Committee’s health staff, on the White House’s urging, held an unprecedented background call with more than 50 reporters this afternoon to rebut the report’s substance.”

Politico’s Chris Frates has his own summary of remarks from report author PriceWaterhouseCoopers: “Hey, we weren’t paid to evaluate the effects of the entire bill, but rather a small slice of it.”

The Washington Post’s Ezra Klein looks at numbers being floated by the White House compiled by MIT economist Jon Gruber, and says, “Gruber certainly has a lot less incentive to twist the facts than the insurance industry does, and his numbers, at least, are free from any glaring deficiencies.”

And National Journal’s Marilyn Werber-Serafini queries her experts, “How much merit is there [to the report]?” Thoughtful but predictable responses follow from Michael Cannon, John Goodman, Len Nichols and Ron Pollack.

snowe pollMany reports are focused on how Republican Olympia Snowe, Maine, will vote, but The New Republic’s Jonathan Cohn reports that “one Democrat also remains a question mark: Ron Wyden.”  An interview follows.

Cato’s Michael Cannon looks beyond today’s vote and predicts trouble: “The problem that Democrats have faced from Day One is finally coming to a head. The Left and the health care industry both want universal health insurance coverage.  The industry, because universal coverage means massive new government subsidies. The Left, because that’s their religion. But universal coverage is so expensive that Congress can’t get there without taxing Democrats.”

Elsewhere, the Galen Institute has launched a new health reform site, healthreformhub.org that rounds up conservative analyses and opinion.

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

AHIP’S Awakening

On the eve of the Senate Finance Committee vote, America’s Health Insurance Plans, the key insurer lobby, has emerged from the sidelines with a critical new study (pdf) by PriceWaterhouseCoopers that finds the bill will increase the average cost of a family plan.

The insurance lobby was a key opponent of President Clinton’s reform plan in 1994, most famously producing the “Harry and Louise” ads, supported the broad principles of the Democratic health overhaul intiatives.  Bloggers are wondering if this apparent change in course could be a game-changer in the larger debate.

Politico’s Chris Frates headlines his post “And The Knives Come Out” and writes, “This could be a turning point that the White House and Baucus worked hard to avoid – when industry begins to publicly oppose Democratic reforms.”

Tevi Troy of the National Review’s Critical Condition says “Losing the insurers at this late hour is a blow to the White House’s hopes of keeping key industries aboard as the Baucus bill approaches a Finance Committee vote tomorrow. In addition, the study is giving Republicans ammunition against the Baucus bill.” He goes on to note: “trying to prevent people from feeling actual health-cost increases is one of the reasons that American health-care costs so much in the first place.”

The Washington Post’s Ezra Klein jokes, “In the hallowed tradition of the tobacco and energy industries, the health insurance industry has commissioned a report projecting doom and despair for those who seek to reform its business practices.”

The New Republic’s Jonathan Cohn says though PriceWaterhouseCoopers is probably “right about a few things,” the report makes several assumptions: “Plenty of experts, including the CBO, don’t think health care providers will simply charge private insurers more to make up for declining revenue from Medicare. The experts could all be wrong, but PriceWaterhouseCoopers doesn’t even acknowledge this belief let alone explain why it might be wrong. Indeed, nowhere in the document does the firm reveal its methods, which is interesting since–unlike CBO or even, say, a private outfit like Lewin–PriceWaterhouseCoopers is not particularly known for this sort of modeling.”

Heritage’s Ernest Istook defends the report: “The PWC projections track what The Heritage Foundation and many others have said about the legislation: It does not save money. It simply taxes those who have health coverage and uses the money to give care to others.”

But the American Prospect’s Adam Serwer thinks lawmakers could address AHIP’s concerns: “Despite the hype this seems far from a knockout punch, since there’s still time to fix things in conference if the bill passes the finance committee, and some of the things that AHIP wants changed health-care reform advocates probably want, too. It’s mostly politically frustrating for the White House, who seem to have assumed that all the ‘relevant stakeholders’ had been placated. By ‘relevant’ of course, I mean moneyed interests, not, you know, the American people.”

Monday, October 12th, 2009