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Health

Republican Senators Seek To Lower Taxes For Health Insurers, Despite Industry’s Record Profits

In October, the health insurance industry released a report alleging that the Affordable Care Act’s taxes on health insurance plans will force companies to shift costs to consumers, adding up to “at least $73 billion in fees through 2019 and increase premiums between 2.8 and 3.7 percent in 2023.” Weeks later, Republican Sens. John Barrasso (WY) and Orrin Hatch (UT) publish an op-ed in Politico echoing this very same warning:

This is how it works: Starting in 2014, health insurance companies will be whacked with a tax based on their net premiums written in the fully insured market. Eighty-seven percent of small businesses purchase insurance in this fully insured market. It is also the place that the self-employed and uninsured go to purchase insurance.

So who will pay this tax? Ultimately, small businesses and their employees. It will most likely get passed through to employees — who will pay for it in lower wages or higher premium contributions. The average employee with a family plan will see take-home pay reduced by $5,000 over the next decade because of this tax, according to one study.

Set aside the hypocrisy of Republicans complaining about policies that pay for spending legislation — remember how they demanded that health care reform be fully paid for? — and what you have are two senators who are gulping down the industry’s kool-aid on premium increases. Both men count the insurers among their top campaign contributors, so it’s certainly no accident that they’re asking Congress to repeal taxes on an industry that’s earning record profits and is about to benefit from tens of millions of new customers as a result of the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

Of course, the appropriate response isn’t to roll back the taxes — which are necessary to finance reform and ensure that coverage expansion is fully paid for — but to strengthen provisions that help lower costs and mitigate the cost-shift. The ACA already requires insurers to spend 80 to 85 percent of their premium dollars on health care rather than administrative expenses and forces companies to justify proposed premium increases. And if the industry is now arguing that it doesn’t have the tools to control premium increases, then perhaps Barrasso and Hatch should bring back some of the cost control measures they helped defeat during the health reform debate. I’m looking at you, public option.

Economy

GOP Senator Suddenly Outraged By Excessive Bonuses At Bailed Out Firms

Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) is outraged that executives at the government-seized mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will receive a combined $12.8 million in bonuses after meeting only “modest goals.” He even held a press conference this week demanding the bonuses be undone. And last night, Barrasso told Fox News that it’s “absolutely wrong” and almost un-American for the bailed out firms to be handing out such large bonuses. Watch it:

Democratic lawmakers have been rightly upset by the bonuses as well, with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) saying yesterday that they induced his “gag reflex.” But while it’s welcome to see a Republican senator care about excessive executive compensation, especially at a bailed out firm, where was Barrasso when this happened back in 2009?

Back then, President Obama wanted to cap executive compensation at banks bailed out by taxpayers, but “Republicans hate[d] the idea.” “[I]s this still America? Do we really tell people how to run [a business], and who to pay and how much to pay?” Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK) asked at the time. Senate Minority leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) explained, “I really don’t want the government to take over these businesses and start telling them everything about what they can do.”

Had Barrasso broken with his party at the time to take a stance similar to the one he is now espousing, he could have helped tip the political balance in favor of reigning in executive compensation at bailed out firms, whether they be banks or Fannie and Freddie.

Health

Cutting Through Barrasso’s Simplistic ‘Employers Will Drop Coverage’ Argument

Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY)

Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) explains why he thinks employers will drop coverage as a result of the Affordable Care Act in today’s Deseret News:

Under the law, businesses are permitted to drop out of paying for employer-provided coverage so long as they pay a fine of $2,000 per employee. This number is far smaller than the $15,000 it costs businesses to provide family health benefits to each of their employees. Small businesses face an even clearer incentive to drop coverage for their employees. They are not required to pay this fine for the first 50 workers who lose coverage.

But economists and economic studies disagree. They argue that Barrasso’s calculation of whether or not dropping coverage and paying the employer penalty in ACA would be more financially beneficial to employers is too simplistic. Once businesses account for other factors — firms would need to compensate workers from whom they remove a current benefit, offering insurance helps recruit top tier employees — they find that the cost per employee actually increases. As the Urban Institute explains, “[T]here is little scope for firms being able to save money from dropping ESI [employer sponsored coverage] coverage except perhaps in firms where most workers have low wages as well as low family incomes, and these types of firms are the least likely to offer ESI today.”

For that reason, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that “the number of people obtaining coverage through their employer would be about 3 million lower in 2019 under the legislation” and actuaries at CMS found that just 1.4 million would move out of employer coverage. In fact, a comprehensive review of all the available employer surveys concluded that “the ESI market will be fairly stable after 2014 when key ACA coverage provisions go into effect.” The only analysis that found otherwise (Douglas Holtz-Eakin’s effort) relied on Barrasso’s simplistic model:

Interestingly, Barrasso attributes his claims to just two sources, “a study co-authored with my colleague, Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK)” and “a June study by McKinsey and Company.” Barrasso’s study speaks for itself, but the now-debunked McKinsey survey has been all but abandoned by the company. As McKinsey explained after the public outcry, the survey “was not intended as a predictive economic analysis of the impact of the Affordable Care Act. Rather, it captured the attitudes of employers and provided an understanding of the factors that could influence decision making related to employee health benefits.”

Climate Progress

Barrasso: ‘This Is Not Your Parents’ EPA’

Our guest blogger is Jorge Madrid, a CAP Research Associate.

Addressing the right-wing think tank American Action Forum last week, Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) praised the Environmental Protection Agency of previous generations, while condemning their current mission:

This is not your parents’ EPA. Your parents’ EPA was focused on obvious problems with clear solutions. This EPA is focused on murky problems with unclear solutions. Your parents’ EPA practiced what it preached. This EPA says one thing and does another. Your parents’ EPA focused on rebuilding the environment. This EPA is focused on remaking society. Your parents’ EPA applied the law evenly. This EPA skirts the law. Your parents’ EPA knew how to learn from its mistakes. This EPA is repeating them.

Barrasso’s unfounded attacks come with an attempt to re-write history, while denying the need for action in the present. “When the EPA got started,” Barrasso said, “environmental action was essential. Our country faced undeniable environmental disasters. Environmental disasters killed people and jobs with equal force.” Action then was “morally necessary,” he concluded.

In fact, Barrasso’s predecessors denied the “undeniable” environmental disasters of the past. In 1970 conservatives argued that enforcement of the Clean Air Act would “cause entire industries to collapse.” In 1975, they argued that “EPA’s power grab could easily spread to other activities: population control, complete regulation of all business.” In 1980, conservatives said the Clean Air Act would cause “a quiet death for business across the country.”

Barrasso is, of course, one of the top deniers of “undeniable” environmental disasters. He is ignoring last year’s explosion of the Deepwater Horizon, which killed 11 people and ruined the Gulf of Mexico with millions of barrels of toxic oil. He is also ignoring the pollution from coal-fired electricity that costs the United States between $175 billion and $523 billion every year in sickness and death. He denies the imminent threat of climate change from burning fossil fuels that puts civilization at risk and is already exacerbating bouts of extreme weather throughout the nation.

Apparently Barrasso thinks that 159 million Americans living in areas that violate clean air health standards does not constitute a moral necessity. Perhaps he should be reminded that 8.5 percent of all American children suffer from asthma; or that every day in America, 30,000 people have an asthma attack, 5,000 people visit the emergency room due to asthma (and 11 people die every day) – according to the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America.

Barrasso said that this is not our parents’ EPA. What he and his conservative colleagues in Congress fail to realize that this is our children’s EPA. The Environmental Protection Agency is protecting all Americans — most especially future generations — from costly damages and deadly harm.

TAKE ACTION: Act now to clean up our air: submit a public comment to the EPA. You can also comment in Spanish.

Health

Is HHS Giving Too Many Waivers To Unions?

After initially describing the Affordable Care Act as a one-size-fits-all government take over, Republicans are now criticizing HHS for granting temporary waivers to companies and states that may have trouble complying with the new regulations in the law (that would require plans to eliminate annual spending limits and meet medical loss ratio standards). Republicans have gone so far as to accuse the Secretary of cronyism in selecting the waiver recipients, claiming — without presenting a shred of evidence — that she granted a disproportionate number of waivers to unions. Here is Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) pressing the case this morning on the Senate floor:

BARRASSO: Last Friday night, the Secretary of Health and Human Services granted another 150 waivers. Another 150 waivers. Now there are over 1,040 waivers covering 2.6 million individuals…Well, of those 2.6 million who have received waivers, Madam President, 1.2 million are members of unions. So that’s 46 percent of the waivers have been given to union members. Now, the website were you go to for that information, of course, the Secretary has tried to disguise how they label those individuals and union plans are now called “multi-employer plans.”

Watch it:

Two million individuals represents a relatively small percentage of American workers, but even so, the ever expanding list of waivers would lead one to dismiss the argument that the agency is a top-down ideologically driven institution that’s interested in imposing its own version of health reform on employers and states regardless of consequences. Quite the opposite. In heeding the concerns of employers and giving plans more time to adjust to the new regulations and limit any coverage disruption, HHS is displaying a degree of flexibility that’s necessary in any mass scale implementation.

It’s also difficult to argue that the Secretary is “disguising” the waivers given to unions. If you click over to this page of approved waivers, it says:

Collectively-Bargained Employer-Based Plan Applicants: Most of the other health plans receiving waivers are multi-employer health funds created by a collective bargaining agreement between a union and two or more employers, pursuant to the Taft-Hartley Act. These “union plans” are employment based group health plans and operate for the sole benefit of workers. They tend to be larger than other typical group health plans because they cover multiple employers. There are also single-employer union plans that have received a waiver. In total, 182 collectively-bargained plans have received waivers.

“Union plan” is slightly inaccurate, however, since the plans are actually governed by a board on which employers and unions are equally represented. Moreover, unlike non-union labor negotiations which can be re-negotiated annually, collective bargaining agreements tie unions down for multiple years and the waivers, I suspect, are being granted to give them more time to change their plans and adjust to the new requirements. It’s the kind of flexibility Republicans supported during the health debate, but are now against.

Health

Graham And Barrasso’s Embarrassing State Opt-Out Proposal

This afternoon, Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and John Barrasso (R-WY) are introducing a bill that reinforces the notion that Republicans aren’t very interested in finding alternatives to expanding coverage or lowering health care costs. This particular measure would allow states to “opt out” of the individual mandate, Medicaid expansion, and what Graham refers to as the “business mandate” — a misnomer for a provision that requires large companies to pay a fee if their workers receive government subsidies from the new exchanges.

Here is how Graham describes the legislation on his website:

GRAHAM: If you don’t buy the health care you pay a fine and a lot of people are going to end up getting into government-run systems. But the real problem for South Carolina, is the expansion of Medicaid….So my bill, along with Sen. Barrasso from Wyoming, a physician, is to allow states — if they choose to — to opt out. Remember when Governor-elect Nikki Haley asked President Obama if they could opt out and he said, maybe they could, well, that’s never going to happen. …What I want to do is give every sate the ability to opt out if they choose and take this fight from Washington, down to the state level….before it drives businesses out of the health care business….opting out is a form of repeal and replacing.

Watch it:

I’m not sure why Graham thinks that individuals who forgo the mandate would “end up getting into government-run systems” since the fine is just that — it doesn’t automatically transfer you into Medicaid or some other form of government-sponsored insurance. It simply leaves you uninsured and on the hook for any unanticipated health care spending.

And as for Graham’s overall bill, it’s unnecessarily redundant. Under Section 1332 of the Affordable Care Act, South Carolina can opt out of the individual mandate if it can find an alternative way to expand coverage and lower health care costs. It’s also free to leave the Medicaid program and forgo the millions it receives from the federal government to cover its poorest residents. Of course, Graham’s measure is slightly different — rather than trying to improve the existing individual mandate opt out provision by working with Sens. Wyden and Brown (who are trying to allow states to leave earlier), he wants South Carolina to abandon the mandate without developing any alternative for expanding coverage. Graham doesn’t even pretend to offer any solutions.

In other words, this senator, who receives taxpayer-subsidized health insurance, is openly proposing a measure that would take away coverage from millions of South Carolinians and offer no affordable means for finding insurance. This is the state of GOP health policy in 2011.

Climate Progress

Scientists Fight Inhofe Attack On Climate Fund

The Wonk Room is reporting and tweeting live from the international climate talks in Cancun, Mexico.

Jim InhofeA group of four Republican senators, led by climate denier Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-OK), have lashed out at the Obama administration’s efforts to protect the poorest and most vulnerable people of the world from climate disasters. Inhofe, Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY), Sen. David Vitter (R-LA), and Sen. George Voinovich (R-OH) wrote a letter to President Barack Obama telling him to drop an international adaptation fund for the least developed nations — part of the Copenhagen Accord signed last year by President Obama and over 130 other nations. Under Democratic leadership, the United States appropriated $1.3 billion for the climate fund in 2010 (compared to $136.8 billion for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan). After citing the budget deficit and high unemployment as reasons not to invest in protecting the vulnerable, the senators attacked the scientific basis for taking action:

In addition, several of the findings of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) concerning the eventual impacts of climate change in developing countries were found to be exaggerated or simply not true. We understand that reforms of the IPCC process are currently underway and we believe that no American taxpayer dollars should be committed to a global climate fund based on information that is not accurate.

The Wonk Room contacted the Climate Science Rapid Response Team, a new volunteer effort by top scientists, to find out what they thought about the claim that the threat to the developing world is too uncertain for the United States to act.

“This is a dishonest climate change denier myth,” top climate scientist Michael Mann, director of the Penn State Earth System Science Center, explained. The senators are referring to two or three errors in the thousand-page impacts report that are “so insubstantial that they didn’t even make the summary for policy makers or the technical summary report.”

Dr. Gary Yohe, the Huffington Professor of Economics and Environmental Studies at Wesleyan University, charged the senators with “misdirection and misrepresentation”:

They are continuing an effort of misdirection and misrepresentation so that the debate does not focus on the issue – the urgent need for adaptation and the value to the United States of investing in adaptation (around the world).

Dr. Spencer Weart, a physicist and leading science historian, told us that “senators are incorrect in their claim that there are substantial errors in the IPCC’s evaluation of the science of impacts of climate change on developing nations”:

Unless the senators can point to serious deficiencies in the actual main conclusions about impacts of the IPCC report — which they have not done and cannot do — the prudent thing is to take the IPCC’s severe warnings about impacts at face value and prepare accordingly.

The senators have received a collective $5.1 million from the fossil fuel industry in campaign contributions.

Dr. Weart’s full response debunks in detail the senators’ letter: Read more

Security

Barrasso Opposes New START Treaty Because Of The ‘Soviet’ Threat

Appearing on MSNBC with Andrea Mitchell today, Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) attempted to justify the threatened Republican obstruction of the New START nuclear arms reduction treaty with Russia. But in doing so, he wrongly called Russia the Soviet Union — not once, but twice. Watch it:

While Barrasso may say this was a slip of the tongue and that he knows that the Soviet Union collapsed nearly twenty years ago in 1991, this is not the first time far-right senators have made this mistake when talking about START. Barrasso also tellingly concluded his remarks by asserting that he disagrees “with the component [of START] that weakens our own missile defense against all enemies, not just the Soviet Union.”

Grouping the Soviet Union (meaning Russia) with other “enemies” of the U.S., is reflective of an outdated Cold War mindset that can only lead to renewed tensions with Russia.

Should Republicans kill the New START treaty, the “reset” of U.S.-Russian relations may collapse. This could endanger U.S. troops in Afghanistan, who depend on supply routes through Russia, and could derail Russian cooperation on Iran sanctions. Perhaps most worrying is that without New START, the U.S. will be unable to monitor Russia’s nuclear arsenal as it has since the end of the Cold War, potentially creating significant nuclear instability. As Andrea Mitchell explained to Barrasso:

With all due respect senator…if you believe in trust and verify this enables us to put people back on the ground there and verify what the Russians are doing where as right now we can’t.

Barrasso’s claim that the treaty undercuts missile defense is also just flatly untrue. Gen. Patrick O’Reilly the head of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency — who was appointed under President Bush — said that New START would “reduce the constraints on the development of the missile defense program.” This is why the U.S. military stands in unanimous support of the treaty and is calling on Senate Republicans to support it as well.

Politics

Sen. Barrasso Calls For Repealing Middle Class Tax Cuts To Finance Tax Cuts For The Rich

In the last week or so, a dizzying array of Republicans have made it their official stance that $33 billion to extend unemployment benefits must be fully paid for, but financing a $678 billion extension of the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy with deficit spending is just fine. “I think we need to be paying for all the spending that’s going on,” said Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN). “But when people can keep more of their own money that shouldn’t be considered a cost.”

Today, Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) tackled this topic and started to go down the same road as the likes of Bachmann and Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ), who was the first to set foot in this fiscal fantasy land. But he then pivoted to suggest that the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy should be funded with unspent stimulus funds:

Q: Are you for extending the Bush tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans, yes or no? [...] Are you paying for them? Or are you for adding to the deficit to continue those tax cuts?

Barrasso: There is so much unspent stimulus money that we ought to use that in a responsible way, which is to help keep taxes low.

Watch it:

This is problematic on two levels. First, it’s simply not true that there’s “so much unspent stimulus money” just lying around. According to the latest data, there is $362 billion in stimulus funding waiting to be allocated (see chart at right), so Barrasso is still $325 billion short of the money he would need to cover the $678 billion cost of extending the Bush tax cuts for just the richest two percent of Americans.

And a longer look at the chart reveals that $125 billion of the unallocated funding is already dedicated to tax cuts. Remember, despite conservative’s constantly portraying it as only federal spending, the stimulus cut taxes for 95 percent of Americans. So Barrasso’s plan to repeal the money amounts to a tax increase on the lower- and middle-classes, which Barrasso wants to then turn around and spend on tax cuts for the rich.

Barrasso didn’t explicitly call for raising taxes on the poor and middle class in order to pay for his preferred policy outcome (which is tax rates for the wealthy that are as low as possible), but that’s what his suggestion would do. A similar sentiment was made far more directly by Wall Street Journal Editorial Board member Stephen Moore, who called for raising the rate of the lowest tax bracket in order to bring down tax rates for the rich.

Cross-posted on The Wonk Room.

Economy

Sen. Barrasso Calls For Repealing Middle Class Tax Cuts To Finance Tax Cuts For The Rich

In the last week or so, a dizzying array of Republicans have made it their official stance that $33 billion to extend unemployment benefits must be fully paid for, but financing a $678 billion extension of the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy with deficit spending is just fine. “I think we need to be paying for all the spending that’s going on,” said Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN). “But when people can keep more of their own money that shouldn’t be considered a cost.”

Today, Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) tackled this topic and started to go down the same road as the likes of Bachmann, and Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ), who was the first to set foot in this fiscal fantasy land. But he then pivoted to suggest that the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy should be funded with unspent stimulus funds:

Q: Are you for extending the Bush tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans, yes or no? [...] Are you paying for them? Or are you for adding to the deficit to continue those tax cuts?

Barrasso: There is so much unspent stimulus money that we ought to use that in a responsible way, which is to help keep taxes low.

Watch it:

This is problematic on two levels. First, it’s simply not true that there’s “so much unspent stimulus money” just lying around. According to the latest data, there is $362 billion in stimulus funding waiting to be allocated (see chart at right), so Barrasso is still $325 billion short of the money he would need to cover the $678 billion cost of extending the Bush tax cuts for just the richest two percent of Americans.

And a longer look at the chart reveals that $125 billion of the unallocated funding is already dedicated to tax cuts. Remember, despite conservative’s constantly portraying it as only federal spending, the stimulus cut taxes for 95 percent of Americans. So Barrasso’s plan to repeal the money amounts to a tax increase on the lower- and middle-classes, which Barrasso wants to then turn around and spend on tax cuts for the rich.

Barrasso didn’t explicitly call for raising taxes on the poor and middle class in order to pay for his preferred policy outcome (which is tax rates for the wealthy that are as low as possible), but that’s what his suggestion would do. A similar sentiment was made far more directly by Wall Street Journal Editorial Board member Stephen Moore, who called for raising the rate of the lowest tax bracket in order to bring down tax rates for the rich.

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