August 6, 2009 2:19 PM

Transparency Lacking in Health Care Reform Battle

By
Stephanie Condon
Topics
Health Care
5058008Thanks to the spread of misinformation from both the left and the right, there has been a great deal of confusion about what health care reform actually means. Yet while the White House is stepping up efforts to debunk what it calls untruths about President Obama's plans, the administration continues its backroom negotiations with congressmen and industry representatives.

The White House on Wednesday confirmed to the pharmaceutical industry that it stands by a deal it made earlier to keep Congress from passing on any more health care reform costs to the industry, beyond the $80 billion already agreed to, the New York Times reports. In June, Mr. Obama announced an agreement from the pharmaceutical industry to cut the cost of prescription drugs for seniors through Medicare by $80 billion.

According to the New York Times, the White House acknowledged for the first time on Wednesday that as part of the deal for the drug industry's $80 billion concession, the White House would block Congress from passing on any more costs to the industry. The deal was brokered even though the president has said time and again that cost containment is a priority for him when it comes to health care reform, and even though he has spoken warily of lobbyists.

Furthermore, the White House's dealings stand in stark contrast to the proposal Mr. Obama gave on the campaign trail to keep health care negotiations completely transparent. As the St. Petersberg Times' Web site PolitiFact.com points out, Mr. Obama said he wanted to keep all negotiations publicly televised.

"I'm going to have all the negotiations around a big table," he said at a town hall meeting in Aug. 2008. "We'll have doctors and nurses and hospital administrators. Insurance companies, drug companies -- they'll get a seat at the table, they just won't be able to buy every chair. But what we will do is, we'll have the negotiations televised on C-SPAN, so that people can see who is making arguments on behalf of their constituents, and who are making arguments on behalf of the drug companies or the insurance companies. And so, that approach, I think is what is going to allow people to stay involved in this process."

A pharmaceutical industry representative who spoke to the New York Times said that the White House told him to negotiate with Sen. Max Baucus, the moderate chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, one of the groups in Congress responsible for health care legislation.

Baucus is leading discussions among a group of three Democrats and three Republicans from the Senate Finance Committee, dubbed "the group of six," to try to reach a bipartisan compromise for health care reform. Even though other members of the Finance Committee have been shut out of the negotiations, and the discussions have been fairly secretive overall, Mr. Obama met with this group this morning to assess their progress.

The group of six's secret meetings have angered liberals in Congress who claim Baucus is conceding too much to Republicans, especially by scrapping plans for a government-sponsored insurance plan, or "public option," as the group reportedly has.

On a conference call today to promote the public option, Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), a strong proponent of the public plan, said with respect to the group of six, "I'm obviously not pleased with the direction of those negotiations overall."

He also expressed skepticism about dealings with special interest groups like the phramaceutical and insurance industries.

"I appreciate that they've come to the table," Brown said, but "they're out to do it their way. These interest groups are out there, as of course they would be... to keep their share and enlarge their share of the public helath care dollar. They're a big reason why this is so difficult."

Twenty-eight senators signed onto a resolution Brown sponsored in May supporting the public option.

"I think a strong public option can pass the Senate," he said.

Still, Brown added, "I'm not going to negotiate publicly on what I won't support."

He said the final Senate bill will depend heavily on Baucus' negotiations.

"I'd have to look at the whole legislation," Brown said. "If it's a co-op instead of a public option, and the subsides are too low, and the employer mandate's too weak... of course I'd vote 'No.' That's as direct as I'd think I can be."

Perhaps it would be easier for Brown -- and the rest of the American people -- to decide where they stand on health care legislation if we had some more meetings on C-SPAN.

Add a Comment
by conversefive August 8, 2009 5:12 AM EDT
The public option is about one thing and one thing only: Creating more gubment jobs for more gubment workers so that more working Americans can pay more in taxes to pay the new gubment workers' wages.
Reply to this comment
by lifeethics August 7, 2009 9:40 AM EDT
The AFL-CIO president calls out his union members and tells them the health reform will subsidize union "pre-Medicare" retirement benefits. In the meantime, Rahm Emanuel is threatening liberal organizations for anti-Dem ads and David Axelrod is "rebranding" the message for the Dem Senators.

People who don't have the foresight to arrange space for large crowd or the sense to avoid the very sound bites for which they're being criticized most likely can't handle the deconstruction of the US health system, much less its rebuilding.
Reply to this comment
by mb1971abcdef August 6, 2009 5:22 PM EDT
There are four points I'd like to see raised about the healthcare debate.
1) I'm lucky enough to have health insurance through my job, but I don't have any choice about my insurer. That choice is made by some corporate beancounter in another state who is no doubt choosing the cheapest health insurance, not the best.
2) Right now an insurance company bureaucrat, whose job is to avoid paying claims, comes between me and my doctor. Why would a government bureaucrat be any worse?
3) It seems that those opposing a "public option" argue that the government can't run anything decently and that the public option will be so much better that it will drive private companies out of business. Huh?
4) When Bush was president and the Republicans had 50 senators, the Republicans could pass any bill they wanted. Why can't the Democrats get this done?
Reply to this comment
by cinci_citizen August 6, 2009 3:13 PM EDT
A MUST SEE interview! It IS worth your time!

http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/07312009/watch.html
Reply to this comment
by cinci_citizen August 6, 2009 3:11 PM EDT
My friend?s mother was recently diagnosed with liver cancer. The specialist said that one third of her liver would need to be removed and she might need to spend a month or more in the hospital to recover. This is not the typical horror story you have been hearing. Her mother?s surgery was approved, in full! The hospital even arranged for transportation to and from the hospital for tests, and did not charge her anything for the ambulance. The surgery is being performed by the number one surgeon in the field and his team is not asking for ANY co-pays or deductibles. I guess we could say thank God for her, she lives in Canada where saving lives is NOT for PROFIT!
Reply to this comment
by power2thepeople August 7, 2009 10:22 AM EDT
Your friend's mother must have been lucky enough to be in the second tier. For those not familiar:

Tier 1: Those with enough money to get treatment in the U.S.
Tier 2: Those that know someone in government or have intricate knowledge of the bureaucracy to navigate and jump ahead
Tier 3: Everyone else

Hope she is feeling better, but I do not want Canada's system. Especially since we would not have a Tier 1.....
.

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