CBS/AP/ September 7, 2011, 7:44 AM

Debt supercommittee pols flush with health money

Supercommittee members: (top, from left to right) Republican Reps. Jeb Hensarling, Dave Camp and Fred Upton; Republican Sens. Jon Kyl, Pat Toomey and Rob Portman; (bottom, from left to right) Democratic Sens. Patty Murray, John Kerry and Max Baucus, and Reps. James Clyburn, Xavier Becerra and Christopher Van Hollen

Supercommittee members: (top, from left to right) Republican Reps. Jeb Hensarling, Dave Camp and Fred Upton; Republican Sens. Jon Kyl, Pat Toomey and Rob Portman; (bottom, from left to right) Democratic Sens. Patty Murray, John Kerry and Max Baucus, and Reps. James Clyburn, Xavier Becerra and Christopher Van Hollen / AP

WASHINGTON - Doctors, drugmakers, hospitals and health insurers have spent millions over the years wooing lawmakers who now are on the powerful congressional panel charged with finding a formula to control deficits and debt, a new analysis finds.

Those very same industries would get hit hard if the supercommittee succeeds.

The industry campaign contributions, compiled by the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics, reinforce doubts that the 12-member panel will issue a sweeping plan to curb federal spending, an equation that can't be solved without major Medicare and Medicaid cuts.

The analysis found that health professionals — a category dominated by doctors — rank among the top 10 sources of campaign dollars for all but two of the panel's members.

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The center ranks contributions to lawmakers from political action committees and individuals associated with more than 80 industries, from defense contractors to energy to farming. The study of health care money, conducted for The Associated Press, found that four big industry sectors accounted for more than $17 million in campaign donations to the lawmakers since 1989.

After doctors, drug companies and makers of health products were the second-largest health care donors in the analysis. They were among the top 20 sources of campaign funds for nine of the panel members.

Hospitals and nursing homes were among the top 20 sources of contributions for eight members, and health insurers were in the top 20 for five lawmakers.

The supercommittee is scheduled to hold its first meeting Thursday. Major changes to Medicare and Medicaid are needed to stabilize federal deficits, but it's an area fraught with political risk.

The two programs serve 100 million elderly, low-income and disabled Americans at a cost of more than $750 billion a year, a growing share of the budget. The panel has wide latitude to propose changes, including shifting costs to beneficiaries, putting a limit on health care spending and placing hospitals and doctors on an austerity budget.

There's also a tempting fallback that would avoid tough choices.

The same law that created the bipartisan panel of six Democrats and six Republicans calls for automatic spending cuts if the committee falls short. For Medicare, that could add up to a 2 percent across-the-board reduction in payments to service providers. Medicaid, which serves the poor, would not be cut. The main subsidies for expanding health insurance coverage under President Obama's overhaul would also be protected.

The fallback option would save supercommittee members from having to pick winners and losers among important financial constituents.

"They don't have to choose among their children," said Dan Mendelson, president of Avalere Health, an economic analysis firm. "They can say, 'This is what the law says."'

The Senate members of the panel are Democrats Max Baucus of Montana, Patty Murray of Washington and John Kerry of Massachusetts and Republicans Jon Kyl of Arizona, Rob Portman of Ohio and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania. Their House counterparts are Republicans Dave Camp and Fred Upton of Michigan and Jeb Hensarling of Texas and Democrats Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, James Clyburn of South Carolina and Xavier Becerra of California.

The analysis found that Baucus, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, was the clear leader in health care industry contributions. Doctors, drug companies and hospitals all ranked among his top 10 sources of contributions, approaching $3.2 million since 1989.

Spokeswoman Kate Downen said Baucus does not let political contributions sway his judgment. "Money never has and never will make any difference in the policies Max pursues," she said. The Finance Committee has jurisdiction over both Medicare and Medicaid.

The runner-up in industry largesse was Camp, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, which oversees Medicare. Doctors, drug companies and health insurers ranked among his top 10 sources of campaign money, for a total of $2.1 million.

Camp spokeswoman Michelle Dimarob dismissed the significance of political contributions. "In accordance with the laws for all elected officials, he will conduct and report on all activities in compliance with and as required by the statutes," she said.

It's not as simple as that, say public interest groups. In politics, money talks.

"Their money doesn't guarantee results, but it certainly gets them to the front of the line in terms of their ability to have access and influence over members of Congress," said Fred Wertheimer, president of the watchdog group Democracy 21. "In this circumstance, the stakes are particularly huge for the health care industry."

Each industry sector has its own concerns. Drugmakers are trying to avoid having to provide big rebates for low-income beneficiaries in Medicare's prescription drug program. Health insurers want to ward off cuts to managed care plans that serve Medicare and Medicaid recipients. Hospitals and nursing homes have already seen their payments reduced, and they're warning that many in-patient facilities will be pushed into the red if the cuts keep up.

Doctors — the group that has contributed the most over the years — also face the biggest challenge. They want to repeal a 1990s budget law that would require a staggering 30 percent cut in their Medicare fees in January. Congress has routinely waived the law, but doctors want to be off the hook permanently. The problem is the supercommittee would have to find other savings to offset the cost, about $300 billion over three years.

"The time to fix this problem is now," said Dr. Peter Carmel, president of the American Medical Association.

Congressional aides say that members want to try, but it would be a heavy lift.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
17 Comments Add a Comment
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USSAmerikan says:
Sure, tax the hell out of the "rich" until they leave the U.S. once and for all. Let them take their dirty money to countries where they will be allowed to pay no taxes as long as they open up a factory, call center or the generic sweat shop du jour for whatever is en vogue. Then, once they all have left, let us all ask each other for a job, since we will be the only ones left... Humm... It almost sounds like that move would be a shortcut straight into the third world without stopping by to see what the 2nd looks like...
In other words, although it sounds real cool and hip to hate the rich, we need to face it, they put their pants on one leg at time and if it were not for the fact that they or their ancestors invented a better moustrap some time ago, they'd be just like us, a bunch of losers blogging away their time instead of trying to create some wealth by getting some real work done :-)
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aftinc says:
Who keeps voting for these peoeple, are they nuts or what. I think we well on our way and it's just a matter of time. Maybe they can call Kadafee or whatever for help with an exit. And it is funny that the two biggest takers are dems, haaaaa, in the face of what all the liberals write, come on folks they're all crooks.
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mollydtt says:
The U S is run by corporations. Welcome to reality.
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ammo17 says:
i hope that the american people don`t think this committee is going to work,they will do nothing unless the lobbyist them what to do,it is all about money.we are so close to being a monarchy,the rich get richer the poor get poorer.you never let the fox watch the chicken coop.
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msimamaji says:
The SuperCommitte are a bunch of Prostitutes. Remember GOP stands for Grand Old Prostitutes. Basically, the GOP wants to turn this country into a sweat shop on top of a toxic dump.
There are alternatives. I just got news of Van Jones'new plans. The AFL-CIO has just published an American Wants to Work Pledge. We need to back people who provide jobs for the needy, not tax breaks for the greedy.
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NotPartyControlled says:
The finest American government that domestic and foreign money can buy.
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royalstar05 says:
Pretty much sounds to me that the Obama health care law is going to stay, and probably will be added too. Like i said before, let the tax cuts for the rich expire, get OUT of these wars and tell major companies in america they have to start paying their fair share in taxes. Then we will be out of this mess.
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msimamaji replies:
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Agreed. Of course, the GOP will fight this because corporations give them generous campaign contributions. If we tax the rich, they will have less money to corrupt politics.
royalstar05 replies:
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Supreme court hasnt decided anything yet and the smaller courts are mostly for it, so i think it stays put.
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woozybarnes says:
"Their money doesn't guarantee results..." said Fred Wertheimer

Bull$$it Fred
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hsinco-2009 says:
Ah, so the money has changed hands and the pols are purchased. Perfect!
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knucklecheese says:
Is anyone really surprised? Do you think that ANY of these curs really have OUR best interest in mind? Demand more folks. It's way past time for all citizens to come together with the common goal of weeding the corruption out of our government. Republican, Democrat, Libertarian, Socialist, Communist, Capitalist - it doesn't matter. We all must agree that this kind of con job does not have a place in our future. The Patriot Act, the "Obamacare" Bill, the bailout, the foolishness in the Middle East - nothing but con jobs. NO MORE! Only we can do it. These scumbags certainly aren't going to police themselves.
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