Senator Max Baucus (D-MT) is walking back his Obamacare “Train Wreck” remarks, while a Kansas Congressman sends a letter straight to the senator: “You wrote this bill.” And, Politico writes that it is “a tough time to be Max Baucus.” All that and more below:
Billings Gazette: CMMS spending $600K, hiring “navigators” to explain the law.
Sen. Max Baucus, a key architect of the Affordable Care Act, said Thursday that his “train wreck” comment about the health-care law’s implementation was not a condemnation of the law.
Baucus, who made the comment at a Wednesday meeting of the Senate Finance Committee in Washington, D.C., said he was merely saying that many people are confused about the law, and that the Obama administration must do a better job informing people about its benefits.
Mike Fierberg, a spokesman in Denver for HHS’ Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said Thursday his office is planning outreach activities in Montana and other states, and that $600,000 will be available to hire and train “navigators” in Montana to help explain the law.
Politico: “It’s a tough time to be Max Baucus.”
So tough that Baucus might feel like he’s been in a train wreck.
Up for reelection next year, the Senate Finance chairman and Montana Democrat is taking heat from all sides after — within the space of a few hours — he slammed the health reform law he helped write and then cast one of only four Democratic votes against universal gun show background checks .
The ”train wreck” comments about health law implementation and public confusion aren’t just rippling across the national stage but also roiling Montana’s Legislature’s debate on Medicaid expansion. The vote was expected to be close and a Democratic sponsor of the expansion legislation said Baucus’s remarks could scare off already-reluctant Republicans.
FULL LETTER FROM CONGRESSMAN MIKE POMPEO (R-KS) TO BAUCUS
http://pompeo.house.gov/news/documentprint.aspx?DocumentID=330089
Pompeo writes to Senator Baucus about Obamacare “Train Wreck”
“No one in the country bears more responsibility for the complexity of this law than you.”
Washington, Apr 18 –
107 Cannon House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
Senator Max Baucus
511 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Senator Baucus,
I was stunned, and also saddened, to read of your complaint that Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius is doing an insufficient job informing the public about the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), otherwise known as Obamacare. My shock wasn’t because I disagreed: You’re right to say this legislation has led to great uncertainty for hard-working Americans, small business owners, and families. No, I was shocked because you wrote this bill. I was saddened because your acknowledgement of the harm caused by PPACA has come so late.
Unlike you, the American people have opposed this law from the moment it was first introduced in Congress. How hard was it to see that even the smartest government bureaucrats can’t competently plan something as complicated as America’s health-care sector?
President Obama’s proposal to rescind the Medicaid disproportionate share hospital payments for 2014 is an admission that this law will not work as written. The IRS is violating the clear language of this law by planning to spend more than half a trillion dollars and tax millions of employers and individuals without congressional authorization.
No one in the country bears more responsibility for the complexity of this law than you. When your supermajority couldn’t pass the bill using normal procedures, you and your Senate colleagues rammed through the final legislation by using parliamentary gimmickry. Then, in the House, Speaker Pelosi cheerfully urged members to pass the legislation “in order to find out what’s in it.”
This was not good policy-making, and now we’re seeing the consequences.
Implementation is still going full steam ahead despite numerous problems—with your support. Contrary to the legislation and the administration’s myriad promises, the SHOP exchanges have been delayed by a year. Officials have admitted that they’ve gone from worrying over the color of fonts on a website to just making sure that the exchanges aren’t a “third world experience.” Little to no information has been provided about how the exchanges will function.
Each one of these problems results from legislation you authored and your colleagues supported. And yet many Republicans, at every step of the process, issued warnings and condemnations based on exactly these inevitable problems. We warned that businesses would drop coverage. We warned that Americans would not be able to keep a doctor or plan that they liked. We warned that insurance premiums would increase.
Secretary Sebelius’s implementation of the law is certainly flawed, but the policy process produced a law that could not possibly be implemented successfully. As legislators, it is our responsibility to write bills that clearly explain our meaning and have achievable goals. By your own admission, this law is a disaster.
Make no mistake. Unless you act before it’s too late, the American people are going to hold you personally responsible for the failings of this law that negatively impact their jobs, their health, and their families. You drafted it, you twisted arms to get it passed, and, until now, you have lauded it as a model for all the world. Your attempts to pass the buck to President Obama’s team will not work, nor will they absolve you of responsibility for the harm that you have brought via this law.
Republicans have repeatedly offered legislation to repeal PPACA and replace it with more sustainable reforms that would have bipartisan support. Perhaps we can work together to fix this mess before it’s too late. We stand ready to repeal the law and put forward legislation that will truly benefit patients and their doctors.
I look forward to hearing from you.
Sincerely,
Mike Pompeo
Member of Congress
Kansas 4th District