Senior House Democrats have largely abandoned hopes of including a government-run insurance option in the final compromise health care bill taking shape, according to several officials, and are pushing for other measures to rein in private insurers.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other senior Democrats told President Barack Obama in recent meetings they want the legislation to strip the insurance industry of a long-standing exemption from federal antitrust laws, officials said. That provision is in the House-passed measure, but was omitted from the bill that the Senate passed on Christmas Eve. (Emphasis added)
They also want the final measure to include a House-passed proposal for a nationwide insurance exchange, to be regulated by the federal government, where consumers could shop for private coverage. The Senate bill calls for a state-based system of exchanges.
Additionally, House Democrats want to require insurers to spend a minimum amount of premium income on benefits, thereby limiting what is available for salaries, bonuses, advertising and other items. The House bill sets the floor at 85 percent; the Senate-passed measure lowers it to 80 percent for policies sold to small groups and individuals.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the negotiations are private.
The maneuvering comes as the White House and majority Democrats intensify efforts to agree on a final measure, possibly before Obama delivers his State of the Union address late this month or early in February.
Government intervention into the insurance market is one of the most contentious issues to be settled. Others include the fate of a Senate-passed tax on high-cost insurance plans, bitterly opposed by some labor unions; the extent to which abortions could be covered by insurance to be sold in the new exchanges; and the amount of money available to help lower-income families purchase coverage.
Liberals long have pressed to include a government-run insurance option in the legislation, arguing it would create competition for private companies and place a brake on costs.
House Democrats included it in their legislation. In the Senate, it drew opposition from Democratic moderates whose votes are essential to the bill's fate. Even attempts to include an expansion of Medicare for uninsured individuals as young as age 55 — widely viewed as a face-saving proposal for liberals — had to be jettisoned.
Given the opposition in the Senate, Pelosi, D-Calif., signaled late last year she did not view a public option as a requirement for a final compromise. Asked in an interview Dec. 16 whether she could support legislation without it, she said, "It depends what else is in the bill."
More recently, she listed her goals for a House-Senate compromise without mentioning the provision she long has backed.
I believe anti-trust laws are around to protect the consumer. When insurance companies get exemption from that, they are getting permission to screw us! lol Yeah, for sure, by exempting anti-trust laws, they are allowed to do price-fixing. i.e., no competition.. Collusion on price is certainly doing the customer in!
Strip them of that exemption!
Geez, did I just agree with Rep.Pelosi? Hmm.
-- Edited by Sanders on Monday 11th of January 2010 09:33:15 PM
__________________
Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010
Today is a big day in the "sausage making world" of the U.S. Congress.
There is this above anti-trust law exemption and price-fixing to watch.
Yesterday, the Union reps met with the President behind closed doors. Something stinks in Denmark. [We need to change the expression to end with ... in WH!]
Public option is supposedly all dead. The lowest strata of insurance is still too expensive for the pooor people that it is intended to cover.
Many aspects of the Senate bill are only just being discovered/understood.
The Stupak and alternate amendments are still kicking strong.
The MA Senate election is less than a week away from completion and seating. Will people like Lieberman vote on a bill on the floor when neighboring MA Senate is so close to being sorted out? Will people revolt if the Congress squeezes a bill through ahead of MA Senate election, making the election a non-deciding factor and therefore pushing Coakley to finish line?
It is going to be an interesting day for Capitol building watchers.
-- Edited by Sanders on Friday 15th of January 2010 09:22:16 AM
__________________
Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010
Unions have - in closed door midnight negotiation with President Obama - have negotiated 5-year exemption from the 40% tax on expensive (cadillac) health care plans.
I wonder if CBO will call it deficit neutral now.
In any case, we know that the out years of the estimate from CBO was very heavily into red already.
__________________
Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010