Friday, September 10, 2010

DeMint a Champion Of Conservatives

By
Philip Rucker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 

WEST COLUMBIA, S.C., July 27 -- On the second floor of the Lexington Medical Center here, Burrell Best, 37, an electrical engineer, and his wife celebrated the birth of their second daughter and voiced fear about the government-run health-care plan being pushed by leading congressional Democrats: "I've just never been a government-takeover kind of guy." 

Five floors above him, J.B. Barker, 85, a retired truck driver, sat in a bed recovering from heart and lung congestion problems. Lunching on pepperoni pizza and Pepsi with his wife, Ellen, sitting at his side, Barker said that he does not want Washington meddling with his medical care and that he doubts Congress can craft a better system: "What we have is about as good as we can do." 

As anxiety about health-care reform was being expressed Monday on the medical center's campus in this conservative suburb of South Carolina's capital, Sen. Jim DeMint (S.C.) was sharpening his opposition to President Obama's attempt to overhaul the health-care industry. 

The Republican has used fiery rhetoric to create a sense of urgency on the matter, making himself a champion of conservatives in the process. 

"I'm swinging on this issue," DeMint said in an interview. "If I can stop a government takeover, I will. . . . It's not personal. It's not political. It's about stopping a bad policy." 

At the Heritage Foundation in Washington on Monday night, the senator signed copies of his new book, "Saving Freedom: We Can Stop America's Slide into Socialism," and received a hero's welcome. Edwin J. Feulner, president of the conservative think tank, introduced him by saying: "DeMint may be the junior senator from South Carolina, but here we call him the senior senator from the Heritage Foundation." 

Last week, DeMint became a target for Obama allies after he likened the president's health-care fight to Napoleon Bonaparte's final defeat. "If we're able to stop Obama on this, it will be his Waterloo," he said in a conference call with GOP activists. "It will break him." 

Republican Senate leaders have distanced themselves from DeMint, saying they are opposed not to health-care reform but to the proposals Democrats are pressing. Sen. George V. Voinovich (Ohio), a retiring moderate, told colleagues Monday he thinks DeMint and other conservatives are to blame for the party's downfall. And none of DeMint's colleagues has endorsed his Waterloo comment. 

The Democratic National Committee seized upon the remark, airing a television ad on cable stations here accusing DeMint of "trying to kill health-care reform" and "playing politics with health care." The party announced on Monday that it had extended the ad through Friday, and a Democratic official said DeMint's outspokenness is helping to recruit candidates to challenge him in 2010 when he faces voters again. 

"We're certainly not trying to quiet Jim DeMint," DNC spokesman Brad Woodhouse said. "He's given us a gift because we're able to go to other Republican members and say, 'Do you agree with Jim DeMint that health care should be used to break the president politically?' I don't think it at all has been helpful to the Republicans." 

South Carolina is reeling from the economic recession and a 12-percent unemployment rate. About 700,000 of the state's residents are uninsured, and Democratic leaders here say no health-care reform would come at too great a price. 

"What will it cost South Carolina families to do nothing?" Rep. James E. Clyburn, the No. 3 House Democrat, said in an interview Monday. "This plan would help make things better. Doing nothing, things will get worse."
Peggie Jenkins, 57, a machine operator at a large bakery here, said Obama's health-care plan "inspired me. . . . He's trying to help all the people, especially the ones losing their jobs. I don't listen to all that negativity out there." 

DeMint, 57, who before entering politics owned a small marketing business and struggled to negotiate affordable health-care coverage for his dozen or so employees, said fixing the system has been one of the main causes of his career. But he considers Democratic plans a threat to freedoms Americans treasure.
Since arriving in Washington in 1999 as a House member, DeMint has been on a crusade against the bureaucracy of the federal city. He sought to abolish the federal tax code and once staged a rally in his home town of Greenville, where he tossed all 17,000 pages of the Internal Revenue Service tax code from a hot-air balloon. 

"I'm working with a lot of people up here [in Washington] who don't really understand the health insurance market," he said. "I don't think anyone in his Cabinet, or Obama himself, understands the business. I've been around doctors all my life. 

"We need some real health-care reform," he added. "So, Mr. President, get your hands off of my health care and let's make health insurance work better." 

James L. Guth, a political scientist at Furman University, said of DeMint: Health care "in many ways kind of crystallizes all of the concerns he used to start with. His first campaign slogan was 'Bring Freedom Home,' and he sees all of these government programs as a gradual encroachment of American freedom." 
Some medical professionals here in Lexington County agree. 

"Whenever I mention it to patients, they are afraid," said John G. Black, a longtime internist at Lexington Medical Center and president of the South Carolina Medical Association. "You could go to any state in the union and you could find patients and physicians who are afraid they will lose freedom in making medical decisions." 

In other pockets of the state, the reaction to Democratic proposals has been strong, too. At a recent town-hall meeting in suburban Simpsonville, a man stood up and told Rep. Robert Inglis (R-S.C.) to "keep your government hands off my Medicare." 

"I had to politely explain that, 'Actually, sir, your health care is being provided by the government,' " Inglis recalled. "But he wasn't having any of it." 

*Please note: The SCMA Health Care Forum does not reflect opinions of the South Carolina Medical Association.

AMA Morning Rounds - July 20, 2009

In a front-page story, the New York Times (7/20, Sack, Pear) reports, "The nation's governors, Democrats as well as Republicans, voiced deep concern Sunday about the shape of the healthcare plan emerging from Congress." At a meeting of the National Governors Association, members discussed "the role of the states in a restructured healthcare system" arguing that "Washington was about to hand them expensive new Medicaid obligations without money to pay for them." Vermont Gov. Jim Douglas (R) said, "I think the governors would all agree that what we don't want from the federal government is unfunded mandates." Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius attended a "private meeting" with the association, stating afterward that "'there's a recognition that states don't have cash right now' and that 'it's difficult to send states the bill if they don't have the money.'" The group "projects that states will face aggregate deficits of $200 billion over the next three years." Members also claimed that "the bills being drafted in Congress would not do enough to curb the growth in health spending."  

 

*Please note: The SCMA Health Care Forum does not reflect opinions of the South Carolina Medical Association.

AMA Morning Rounds - July 20, 2009

Administration officials appeared on the Sunday morning political shows to defend the President's healthcare plans. Media accounts tend to describe an Obama team playing defense on a variety of issues, such as the costs of the overhaul, taxes or GOP charges that the President's plan would lead to "rationing." The AP (7/20, Elliott) refers to the Administration facing both a "skeptical public" and "independent budget predictions that contradict the White House's rhetoric." Moreover, adds the AP, "the politics of adding to the deficit or raising taxes is tricky," and "Republicans paint Obama's proposals as a massive tax that would leave small businesses wounded, employers shifting away from private plans toward a government-based system, and workers without coverage." NBC Nightly News (7/19, story 2, 2:30, Quintanilla) said that GOP "critics and some moderate Democrats ratcheting up their criticism." ABC (Viqueria) added that "the stakes couldn't be higher for the President in this fight." 

The AP (7/20) notes that Peter Orszag, director of the Office of Management and Budget, played down "reports that lawmakers are bogged down over the healthcare overhaul," and said "good progress is being made toward Obama's goal of a bill in August." He also said that "it's important that Congress agree on a proposal that doesn't add to the deficit, as Obama has demanded. The president has said he will not sign a bill that adds to the deficit." The Hill (7/20, Allen), however, also casts Obama officials as playing defense, reporting that the President's "top cabinet advocates for universal healthcare were grilled on Sunday over how to raise taxes." The Politico (7/20, Smith) and the Wall Street Journal (7/20, Power) also cover the story. 

Obama's public approval on healthcare falls under 50 percent. The Washington Post (7/20, A1, Balz, Cohen) reports on its front page, "Heading into a critical period in the debate over healthcare reform, public approval of...Obama's stewardship on the issue has dropped below the 50 percent threshold for the first time, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll." While the President's "overall approval rating remains" high at 59 percent, "this is the first time in his presidency that Obama has fallen under 60 percent in Post-ABC polling, and the rating is six percentage points lower than it was a month ago." The Post adds, "Since April, approval of Obama's handling of healthcare has dropped from 57 percent to 49 percent, with disapproval rising from 29 percent to 44 percent."

*Please note: The SCMA Health Care Forum does not reflect opinions of the South Carolina Medical Association.

Click here for a printable version of the chart.

*Please note: The SCMA Health Care Forum does not reflect opinions of the South Carolina Medical Association.

AP - July 10, 2009

WASHINGTON – House Democrats plan to pay for a sweeping health care overhaul by boosting taxes on the wealthy.
The taxes will hit households with incomes of $350,000 a year and above.

Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles Rangel of New York said the tax would raise $540 billion over 10 years.

In combination with cuts to Medicare and Medicaid that would pay for a comprehensive health bill in the range of $1 trillion.

Rangel told reporters of the decision after a day of meetings on President Barack Obama's top domestic priority.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama on Friday acknowledged the tough going for health care overhaul as lawmakers struggled with fresh divisions over how to pay for comprehensive legislation.

"We're closer to that significant reform than at any time in recent history," Obama told reporters at a news conference in Italy. "That doesn't make it easy. It's hard. And we are having a whole series of constant negotiations."

Conservative Democrats are demanding significant changes before they will support a sweeping health care overhaul, forcing the House to join the Senate in stalling Obama's top domestic priority. Democratic leaders had set an ambitious timetable for the House and Senate to vote on legislation before the August recess.

Asked if it were "do-or-die" if the timetable slipped, Obama said: "I never believe anything is do-or-die. But I really want to get it done by the August recess."

The "Blue Dog Democrats" group released a list of demands on the eve of House Democratic leaders' planned unveiling of their final bill Friday. The bill release was pushed back to next week and Democratic leaders spent part of Friday meeting with the fiscally conservative Blue Dogs to work through their concerns.

"The message that was sent was heard loud and clear," Rep. Jason Altmire, D-Pa., a member of the group, said Friday. The group's concerns were the need for more cost containment measures, protections for small businesses and a focus on rural health care.

"We cannot support a final product that fails to" address these issues, members of the group wrote to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Majority Leader Steny Hoyer. Opposition from the 52-member group could imperil House passage of a bill.

Before Thursday, delays and internal Democratic disputes over taxes and the role of government had seemed mostly confined to the Senate. A bipartisan deal emerging in the Senate Finance Committee was threatened this week when Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and other top Democrats indicated displeasure with the likely payment method, a new tax on health care benefits.

That has left Finance Committee members scrambling for alternative taxes to replace the $320 billion the benefits tax would have raised over a decade. Democrats are considering raising taxes on wealthy investors instead, along with other options, according to officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private negotiations. The proposal to extend the current 1.45 percent Medicare payroll tax to capital gains earned by high-income taxpayers would bring in an estimated $100 billion over 10 years.

In the House, Democratic leaders had hoped to release an ambitious bill Friday that would achieve Obama's goals of holding down health care costs and extending insurance to the 50 million people who lack it. Insurers would have to cover all comers, employers would be required to offer insurance and individuals would be required to purchase it, with subsidies for the poor. The tax-writing Ways and Means Committee met throughout the day Thursday to try to finalize plans on how to pay for the plan, with an income surcharge on high-earners of some 3 percent or more emerging as the leading option.

But the move by the Blue Dogs scrambled the equation. It was unclear whether Democratic leaders would be able to satisfy the group's demands since in some cases they're far apart from draft language produced by the three House committees writing health legislation.

Also unclear was whether the setbacks would amount to anything more than a brief delay for a bill of enormous complexity and controversy.

With House leaders scrambling to address moderate Democrats' concerns, business groups increased the pressure on House leaders with letters objecting to pivotal parts of the evolving plans.

The National Coalition on Benefits, representing major business groups and companies like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and AT&T, told House leaders that business would be hurt by requiring employer coverage of workers, creating a public insurance plan and other proposals.

"The proposal in its current form needs serious revision," their letter said.

The National Retail Federation wrote leaders of the House Ways and Means Committee to say the House plan would cost jobs and shift health costs to employers.

*Please note: The SCMA Health Care Forum does not reflect opinions of the South Carolina Medical Association.

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