Yes, I find it ironic that Mr Rove would fret over cronyism — he seemed pretty upset about TEA Party types crashing his GOP establishment’s ranks, after all — but in this case he’s perfectly on point:
In September, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius began granting waivers to companies that provided workers “mini-med” coverage—low-cost plans with low annual limits on what the insurance will pay out. This followed announcements by some employers that they would have to drop these plans because they did not meet the new health law’s requirement that 85% of premium income be spent on medical expenses.
By early December, HHS had granted 222 such waivers to provide mini-med policies for companies including AMF Bowling and Universal Forest Product, as well as 43 union organizations. According to the department’s website, the waivers cover 1,507,418 employees, of which more than a third (525,898) are union members. Yet unionized workers make up only 7% of the private work force. Whatever is going on here, a disproportionately high number of waivers are being granted to administration allies.
Then, on Dec. 21, Ms. Sebelius announced that insurance companies seeking rate increases of 10% or more in the individual or small group market must publicly justify the hikes under standards set by her department.
Insurance regulation has traditionally been a state responsibility, and 43 states must already approve proposed insurance-rate increases. ObamaCare does not authorize HHS to deny rate increases, but the agency said that if a state “lacks the resources or authority” to conduct the kind of review the agency wants, it will conduct its own.
This proposed regulation will erode the states’ dominant role in insurance regulation, centralizing more power in Washington. The HHS announcement also mentioned that it will set different thresholds of what constitutes an “unreasonable” increase for every state by 2012.
The Obama administration’s behavior to date suggests that it will not hesitate to take care of its friends. The Senate Republican Policy Committee’s health policy analyst, Chris Jacobs, points out that the administration has already given an extravagant gift to the AARP (American Association of Retired Persons), a key player in passing the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
The AARP provided a big chunk of the $121 million spent on ads supporting the bill’s passage, as well as $21 million on lobbying in 2009, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. HHS’s proposed regulations on Dec. 21 exempted the AARP’s lucrative “Medigap” plans from the rate review and other mandates and requirements.
The AARP and other Medigap providers can require a waiting period before seniors with pre-existing conditions have to be covered. Insurers covering those under 65 cannot.
The AARP is also exempt from the new law’s $500,000 cap on executive compensation for insurance executives. (The nonprofit’s last CEO received over $1.5 million in compensation in his last full year, 2009.) It won’t pay any of the estimated $14 billion in new taxes on insurance companies, though according to its 2008 consolidated financial statement, it gets more money from its insurance offerings than it does from dues, grants and private contributions combined. Nor will it have to spend at least 85% of its Medigap premium dollars on medical claims, as Medicare Advantage plans must do; the AARP will be held to a far less restrictive 65%.
It’s not hard to connect the dots. The Obama administration is using waivers to reward friends. On the flip side, business executives will be discouraged from contributing to the president’s opponents or from taking any other steps that might upset the White House or its political appointees at HHS.
This is not what people had in mind when candidate Obama promised in his acceptance speech in August 2008 to undo “the cynicism we all have about government.”
In a speech at the University of Iowa last March, the president heralded health-care reform as “a new set of rules that treats everybody honestly and treats everybody fairly.” Determining whether that is true will be another task for House Republicans. They have an obligation to look into this matter, and Mr. Obama can hardly object.
Sure he can.
But House Republicans should luxuriate in his objections — and in the inevitable attacks on them from the media, whose biases they should then point out are an object lesson in the ills of a politicized “progressive” client media.
What ObamaCare does is promote liberal fascism: the government will pick the winners and losers, and they’ll base their decisions on obedience and obeisance.
It’s the Chicago way writ large.
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related: quantifying the “problem” ObamaCare supposedly addressed.
America is become a failshit dirty socialist backwater awash in corruption is the takeaway here.
The thugocracy of this imperial presidency rolls on. Where are the principled objectors from the left speaking troooof! to powah? I guess that’s gone out of fashion.
I saw somewhere last week the suggestion that the newly seated Congress pass an annulment of all and every waiver, partly in order to restore a just balance to the administration of the law, and partly no doubt, out of a sense of mischief, thinking that the actual ramifications of the law would be the better understood the more people felt its onerous weight. Course, as with every such proposal for the next couple of years, there stands the question: how to get this lawmaking past the socialists in the Senate and the Mack-Daddy socialist in the White House?
There’s an old saying here in Chicago, attributed to a ward boss in the 50s: “We don’t want nobody [that]nobody sent.”
Safer – in the alternative, they could extend waives to all businesses, demanding everyone be treated exactly the same way as the companies that received waivers. I prefer your way, but maybe they could push both.
sdferr – in the alternative, they could extend waives to all businesses, demanding everyone be treated exactly the same way as the companies that received waivers. I prefer your way, but maybe they could push both.
My spell check keeps changing your name. My apologies.
JD, heh, why does spellcheck hate me?
Sorry, couldn’t resist.
Maybe the House should just defund HHS altogether, and the AARP and SEIU can fund it directly. Everybody wins!
My bold. Perhaps when he was stronger politically. Not now. Now the safest bet is to make sure he’s a one-termer.
Which isn’t where I’d want to find myself if I was Obama (or a Senate Democrat).
This does seem like an incredibly fertile area to start looking for concrete corruption. We talk about how the faceless bureaucrats can strike fear into everyone and there is nothing we can do about it. Well, we’re not entirely defenseless now, we can start sitting them down and asking them pointed questions under oath. Same with the EPA and Justice.
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“JD, heh, why does spellcheck hate me? “
Don’t be talking about spill check. Spell cheek is the awesome!
What you should be asking yourself, why are you spelling you’re name wrong?
speaking of cronyism… spendy spendy whorepublican Howard P. “Buck” McKeon winces at spending cuts
me I think $78 billion over five years is a good start and Buck the spendy spendy fuck should say thank you more please
The thing about being a “friend” is that once you are one you can be made to jump through many new hoops to remain friends. The first step down that road is made fairly painless, “First One’s Free”, then the price goes up and up.
Fascism, our enemies we crush right away, our “friends” get theirs a little later.
heh, Lee.