Dayton Accuses MNsure's GOP Critics Of 'Farce'

MINNEAPOLIS (AP/WCCO) — Gov. Mark Dayton lashed out at critics of Minnesota's health insurance exchange on Tuesday, accusing them of waging a propaganda campaign to destroy it.

The Democratic governor spoke to reporters a day after GOP members of the Legislature's MNsure oversight committee said they wanted to use a hearing set for Wednesday to raise tough questions about the troubled launch of MNsure last October and the decision to proceed despite evidence that the website still had serious problems.

Dayton called their plans for raising those issues a "farce." Rather than focusing on problems that happened six months ago, he said, the important thing to know was that over 175,000 Minnesotans used MNsure to get health coverage by March 31, including many who didn't have it before.

"The fact that they can pretend this is part of an oversight process is just ludicrous," he said. "They just want to trash MNsure, they want to trash the Affordable Care Act, they want MNsure to fail."

GOP Reps. Tara Mack, of Apple Valley, and Joe Hoppe, of Chaska, responded with a statement saying the oversight committee "isn't a 'farce,' it's the law. With recent news reports stating Governor Dayton and MNsure leaders chose to expose Minnesotans to a program that wasn't ready for consumers, it's clear we need more oversight of ObamaCare not less."

Dayton said he wouldn't send any of his advisers to speak at the hearing. While the committee had added his human services commissioner, Lucinda Jesson, to the agenda, and her office initially confirmed that she planned to appear, she soon backed out.

"The MNsure board will be well represented by (chairman) Brian Beutner and (interim CEO) Scott Leitz at tomorrow's MNsure Legislative Oversight Committee hearing, and Commissioner Jesson will not attend the hearing. She has no further comment on the matter," the department said in a statement.

The Star Tribune reported Sunday that MNsure leaders chose to launch the website even though they knew it was loaded with bugs, and that MNsure's executive director at the time, April Todd-Malmlov, warned the governor at a meeting 12 days before the system went live that nobody was certain if the site would work.

Dayton insisted that the Sept. 19 meeting was the first time he learned that problems with the website were serious enough to call into question whether MNsure could proceed with the launch on the same day open enrollment began across the country under the Obama administration's health care overhaul. But he said his office kept in close contact with MNsure officials throughout the process and he thought enough problems would be resolved in time.

Even in hindsight, Dayton said, he still believes the decision not to delay was correct. He said he thought the system was operating "very well" at first and that its glitches were due mostly to problems with the federal system. He said he "didn't have any inkling of persisting problems until the middle of November" when he said new problems kept cropping up every time old issues got resolved. He also said he never tried to mislead Minnesotans on MNsure's condition.

And the governor said critics of MNsure and the Affordable Care Act haven't offered an alternative except going back to the way things used to be.

"To evaluate the success or failure six months into the undertaking is just really shortsighted and unrealistic," he said. "It's going to take a couple years to get things ironed out, to get it working the way it should. Then we can evaluate the costs and benefits."

Republicans Criticize Dayton Over Problems With MNsure

House Republican Rep. Kurt Zellers believes that the problems with MNsure illustrate a lack of leadership in the state.

"You cannot at once say you didn't know and then criticize the very people you appointed for not doing a good job of oversight, if you yourself aren't willing to take responsibility for information you knew," Zellers said.

Listen to Zellers Sound

He said it shouldn't have gone forward with it.

"If there were any things that were looking fuzzy, or if it wasn't going to work, then you shouldn't have gone forward with it," he said.

Zellers said there were signs that should have been noticed.

"You know 12 days before there were problems with it," he said.

Dayton defended his position, saying he never meant to mislead Minnesotans.

(TM and © Copyright 2014 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2014 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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