By Joan McCarter, 6-28-09
This week, Senator Max Baucus told the New York Times that the Senate Democrats gave too much away in going into the health care reform process.
He conceded that it was a mistake to rule out a fully government-run health system, or a “single-payer plan,” not because he supports it but because doing so alienated a large, vocal constituency and left Mr. Obama’s proposal of a public health plan to compete with private insurers as the most liberal position.
That’s encouraging, but will he take a lesson from that experience and apply it going forward? The problem for Senator Baucus now is that that public plan--critical to the President’s reform plan and the one thing that could really ensure that private insurance companies have to actually play fair and participate in real, substantial reform--is the one thing that Republicans refuse to budge on. And Baucus keeps insisting that he has to have his colleague, Republican Chuck Grassley, on board.
And it’s not just on the public plan. Baucus seems to be ignoring the obvious fact that Grassley is undercutting just about everything Baucus proclaims to intend to do with a reform package.
That was the case from the very beginning of the session, and has continued unabated. Consider this from June 12th, when Grassley made crystal clear his objection to any real reform:
Grassley, the top Republican on the Finance Committee, says he won’t back legislation to overhaul the U.S. health-care system unless Democrat Baucus, the panel’s chairman, abandons some of his party’s key goals. Among them: a government-run insurance plan and a mandate that employers cover workers.
“The biggest challenge he has in his own caucus is that a large share of Senate Democrats really want the government to run everything,” said Grassley, 75, an Iowa farmer and former chairman of the panel, which is taking the lead on the bill....
But Baucus is seemingly remains undaunted in his pipe-dream of biparisan reform.
Baucus, 67, the scion of a Montana ranching family who has split with his party before, says he’s willing to compromise, even though many Democrats may not be. The party has a 59-40 advantage in the Senate....
“It’s very important to get bipartisan consensus on something as big and large as health-care reform,” he said in an interview. “We want something sustainable.” ...
Baucus said there are ways to structure a new public program that might appeal to more Republicans. “There’s a lot we can trade off,” he said.
But if you listen to Grassley carefully, as recently as Wednesday, there isn’t anything you can trade off to get his support:
On MSNBC this morning, Norah O’Donnell asked Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA), the ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, “what needs to be in” a health care reform bill “for it to be bipartisan.” After saying it needs to be paid for, Grassley declared, “We need to make sure that there’s no public option.” When O’Donnell double-checked that Grassley was saying that a public option was a dealbreaker for Republicans, he replied, “Absolutely.”
This “bipartisanship” extends goes beyond just Baucus, to Senate Democrats and the White House, and it is one of the problems with having Max Baucus be the spearhead in the process, because of the illness of Sen. Kennedy, who should have been the shepherd of health care reform. The NYT had a long report on Baucus and reform this week, pointing out--unwittingly--the key problem with Baucus in this effort.
All of that has left Mr. Baucus, 67, front and center, with the future of the health system largely in his hands. “If there is any chance we can do a bipartisan bill, it has to be in the Finance Committee,” said Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the majority leader.
Mr. Baucus, in an interview, said he had been preparing for this role since he was elected to the Senate in 1978, and viewed this as his moment — and Montana’s — to make history....
Mr. Baucus takes great pride in working with Republicans, especially Mr. Grassley. Last week, as Republicans pummeled Mr. Dodd over the cost of his bill, Mr. Baucus huddled with some of those critics, including Mr. Grassley, to develop a bill that Republicans could support....
Soft-spoken but tenacious, Mr. Baucus in recent weeks successfully strong-armed several lobbying groups into muting their criticism of his legislation, part of a concerted strategy of assuring interest groups that they had his ear as long as they did not chew on it.
Some Republicans called it heavy handed. “They’re literally being intimidated,” said Senator John Cornyn, Republican of Texas.
Even as Mr. Baucus has tamped down criticism, he has continued collecting campaign contributions from industry interests, including drug companies and insurers.
He did make some headlines with that collecting of campaign contributions, particularly last weekend in the form of a lobbyist party back home in Montana, hosting a bunch of lobbyists and political supporters for his Fly-Fishing & Golfing weekend in Big Sky at $2,500 a pop, $5,000 for a political action committee. He’s going to do it again at “Camp Baucus,” at the end of July. One activist characterized this all as “unseemly,” since he is at the center of the most critical reform debate of the session. Unseemly? Not in Max’s mind. “There’s no problem. I’ve been doing these events for more than 10 years.”
This all should raise some key questions for folks back home, where Baucus’s constituents, and lots of them, need real, substantive reform. Particularly the more than a third of Montana’s residents under age 65 who are uninsured. Who matters more to the Senator? Senate Republicans, lobbyists, or the people of Montana who need his help?
[End of article]Baucus works for the health insurance and pharma industries. Membership in the Democratic Party is only a sheepskin costume that he wears to get close enough to ensure that the fleecing (pun intended) can continue. For Baucus to orchestrate a gutting of reform momentum by Grassley or some other Republican surrogate would be the perfect way for him to serve his true masters (and they sure ain't the people of Montana ...or any other state for that matter) while still preserving his Democratic camouflage. As I've said before, having western Democrats is fine for maintaining majorities, but not at any cost. When these dogs turn too blue, they need to go to the pound.
Comment By Mickey Garcia, 6-28-09Despite his serious demeanor, Baucus is an idiot who has been conned and intimidated by Right Wing Ideologues before the real bargaining begins.
Comment By Bill Croke, 6-28-09Well, Joan, you've been reading the New York "Times" again. Sorry that Grassley is doing a great job while operating from a distinctly minority position. In truth, this is another extremely bad bill not overtly popular with the American people. The lawyers will still hold sway because the president loves them. Despite your usual partisan whining (why don't you just go to work for Baucus or somebody like him, and spare us your biased ruminations?), there will be no substantial healthcare reform without tort reform. Doctors don't like this bill, lawyers do; what does that tell you? In short, Grassley is effective, Baucus is typically tongue-tied and dumber than a box of Flathead Cherries, and Senator Kennedy, your much-admired "shepherd" for heathcare reform, will soon be heading off to the great Senate cloakroom in the sky. Thumbsucker, Joan.
Comment By cathie burkland, 6-28-09Framing Baucus as a somewhat victim is a bit much for me. He's the chair of the committee. He didn't get there through a serious of errors. He knew what he was doing, and I'm pretty convinced here, now, at this point, that he never really had any intent to do anything more with health care reform other than to provide as much health care as possible PROVIDING that the interests of PHaRMA and the insurance industry were protected. Hard to think of that as altruistic.
For a while I wanted to think that his heart and his mind (and his work as chair of finance) was in it to do the right thing. I'm completely unconvinced of that now.
Great Falls reporter John Adams did two interviews with Baucus over health reform, which have, mysteriously, disappeared from his blog. But YouTube is still available : http://is.gd/1hhSx and http://is.gd/1hi9k.
Listen to that and see how much of a victim Baucus is at the hands of Grassley.
Croak's rapid attempt to frame the situation is just more evidence that the fix was in from the beginning. According to this predictable rightwing line, Baucus isn't throwing the fight. No, far from it, Grassley is simply suddenly being so effective that Baucus has been overwhelmed by Grassley fancy footwork. Burkland's comment is dead on target, only not emphatic enough. I said it before and I meant it; Baucus is a true collaborator; he works for the health insurance and pharma industries and his membership in the Democratic Party is only a sheepskin costume that he wears to ensure that the fleecing continues. Baucus is nothing but a commodity, owned by the grifters in the "healthcare" (ha, ha, ha) industry.
Comment By Bill Croke, 6-28-09Mikey, You sound like you've been mixing your metaphors with your medications again.
Comment By Montucky, 6-29-09The Baucus plan is very simple: make the health insurance and drug industries very happy and they will pay to keep him in office. "Yes, master".
Comment By Marsha Correira, 7-01-09Let me alert Sen. Max Baucus, and all the other so-called conserva-Dems:
Grassroots Democrats worked long and hard since 2006 to elect Barack Obama and achieve a 60-40 split in the Senate. We did this because we trusted the Democrats to take seriously the issues important to us. We wanted change. We still want change.
We want real health care reform. Quality health care should be accessible to every American. We shouldn't have to fight an insurance company, its overpaid CEO and its roomful of lawyers to get them to pay our medical bills. (I have recent experience with this.) We need single-payer, and we need it now. We need affordable premiums which we remit to the government and generous benefits which are paid without argument. Do not mix profiteering insurance companies into this formula.
We haven't forgotten how to vote. All the conserva-Dems will eventually face the electorate. If the Senate Democratic majority fails to act in our best interest, we will find other Democratic senatorial candidates who will "dance with what brung them." If our Democratic senators keep kissing the butts of the Repugnicans such as Grassley, they can kiss their own butts goodbye, 'cause we're not going to tolerate turncoats who abandon us when the chips are down.
Wise up, Baucus! You know how to do what's right for us. Seeing our tax money go down the tubes for a stupid war in Iraq, bank and insurance company bailouts and auto company bailouts and then be told that our tax money is gone and the government can't afford what we need is depressing. I don't mind paying taxes, but I'd like to see some return after a lifetime of paying and having fighting for health care.
Re: my previous comment
The last sentence had a typo. I intended to say, "...I'd like to see some return after a lifetime of paying and then having to fight for health care."
Yes, Marsha pretty well covered it all ...and correctly.
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