Wednesday, December 28, 2005

Article: Poor, middle class lost out to special interests in budget bill

From John Curry
Subject: Sleep soundly tonight, your Congress is busy screw...Oops, I mean saving you!
Columbus Dispatch, Wednesday, December 28, 2005
E.J. DIONNE

With indicted super lobbyist Jack Abramoff said to be ready to cooperate with prosecutors and his partner, Michael Scanlon, already singing, 2006 is expected to be the year of congressional scandals.

Lord knows, a housecleaning in the Capitol is in order. But the Abramoff scandal is just part of the corruption of our political system. There is another level of specialinterest influence that cannot be handled by prosecutors: Only the voters can render a judgment on a politics of favoritism that has created a new Gilded Age. It’s clear that the national government has placed itself squarely on the side of the wealthy, the privileged and the connected.

Rarely does a single action serve as so powerful an example of how the system is working. The recent budget bill, which squeaked through the House and the Senate just before Christmas, is a road map of insider dealing. It shows that when choices have to be made, the interests of the poor and the middle class fall before the wishes of interest groups with powerful lobbies and piles of campaign money to distribute.

GOP majorities in the Senate and the House insisted that they wanted to cut the federal budget. But the Senate and House offered competing plans for achieving savings. When it came time to meld the proposals, almost every choice congressional leaders made favored the interest groups.

Consider health programs. The House bill proposed substantial cuts for Medicaid beneficiaries, but the Senate bill – partly because of pressure from moderate Republicans – did not include them. Instead, the Senate proposed to save taxpayer money by eliminating a $10 billion fund to encourage regional Preferred Provider Organizations, known as PPOs, to participate in the Medicare program. It also sought more rebates to the federal government from drug manufacturers participating in Medicaid.

Note the difference: Instead of imposing cuts on the poor, the Senate sought savings from corporate interests. Surprise: The final bill dropped the $10 billion cut to the PPOs, and also dropped most of the rebate demands on drug manufacturers. Instead, the agreement hammered Medicaid recipients with $16 billion in gross cuts over the next decade. The net cuts are lower because of new Medicaid spending, partly to help cover Hurricane Katrina’s victims.

The Medicaid cuts include increased co-payments and premiums on lowincome Americans, and the budget assumes savings because fewer poor people will visit the doctor. As Kevin Freking of the Associated Press reported: "The Congressional Budget Office has concluded that such increases would lead many poor people to forgo health care or not to enroll in Medicaid at all – contributing to some of the $4.8 billion in Medicaid savings envisioned over the next five years."

Ah, say their defenders, but these cuts will be good for poor people. According to The New York Times, Rep. Joe L. Barton, R-Texas, an architect of the Medicaid proposals, said the higher copayments were needed to "encourage personal responsibility" among lowincome people. Spoken like a man who never has to worry about taxpayerprovided coverage.

And that is just one instance among many of where corporate interests were shielded from cuts, while child-support enforcement and foster-care programs were sliced. Shortly before the bill came to the House floor, Republicans leaders, at the insistence of a group of Ohio GOP members, dropped a $1.9 billion cut that would have changed Medicare payments to oxygen manufacturers. The main beneficiary was the Invacare Corp. of Elyria.

Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., opposed the original, milder Senate budget bill but turned around and voted for the final harsher bill. According to Congress Daily, Coleman backed the final budget "after negotiators took out cuts affecting his state’s sugar beet growers." Coleman told the paper: "Karl Rove called me and asked what I wanted. A few hours later it was out of the bill."

The good news is that this budget is not law yet. Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., used a clever procedural maneuver to force it back to the House for one more vote next year.

When this 774-page behemoth hit the House floor shortly after 1 a.m. on Dec. 19, many members were not fully aware of what was in it. Now that they know, maybe some of the moderate Republicans who caved to their leaders will save their party’s honor by killing this special-interest mess. If I may borrow from Barton, doing so would definitely "encourage personal responsibility" among Republican leaders.

E.J. Dionne writes for the Washington Post Writers Group.

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