by Lee Fang and Nick Surgey
Just hours before House Speaker Paul Ryan held a press conference to sell his health care overhaul legislation — using a PowerPoint presentation mocked for misrepresenting basic facts — he was doing something he’s much better at: fundraising.
The two things were related. The Thursday morning breakfast
fundraiser he attended was hosted by a lobbying firm working to unwind
the Affordable Care Act on behalf of health insurance company Blue Cross
Blue Shield, one of the big winners of Ryan’s proposed legislation.
The breakfast, according to an invitation,
was sponsored by McGuireWoods PAC, the political action committee for
the lobbying firm McGuireWoods. Blue Cross Blue Shield, an Anthem
company, pays McGuireWoods $120,000 a year to lobby on changes to health reform, records show. Attendees of the event paid were asked to pitch in as much as $10,000.
Ryan’s American Health Care Act (AHCA), which rolls back most of the
revenue-generating provisions of the ACA, reduces premium subsidies, and
imposes deep cuts to Medicaid, has largely been panned by medical professionals, health policy experts, and political advocacy groups from across the ideological spectrum.
But the bill enjoys enthusiastic support from some corners of the
health care industry — primarily health insurance firms and medical
device companies that directly benefit from the legislation.
America’s Health Insurance Plans, the trade group that lobbies on
behalf of health insurance companies, wrote a letter to Congress on
Wednesday praising much of the AHCA.
“The proposed legislation includes a number of positive steps to help stabilize the market,” wrote AHIP
president Marilyn Tavenner, citing the bill’s provisions on “continuous
coverage” and added flexibility for “health plans to offer consumers
more choices.”
Alissa Fox, the senior vice president for the Blue Cross Blue Shield
Association, another health insurance lobby group, also provided a statement praising the bill.
The ACHA includes a special 30 percent premium surcharge insurers can
charge anyone who has gone without health coverage for at least two
months. The bill also reduces the types of medical coverage Medicaid
policies are required to cover — the type of flexibility insurers have sought in order to cover less health care costs.
As we reported
earlier this week, insurance lobbyists are particularly fond of a tax
change made by the Republican health bill that removes limitations on
deductions for executive compensation. That reversal will reduce the tax
bill for health insurance companies while incentivizing higher pay for
insurance employees.
The ACHA would also permanently repeal the 2.3 percent excise tax on
medical device tax, which was imposed by Obama’s health reform
law. AdvaMed, the lobby group representing the largest medical device
firms, released a statement commending the Republican-led House Ways and Means Committee for the repeal of the tax.
While some media outlets praised Ryan’s “wonky”
style and use of bar graphs to make his case for the bill on Thursday,
many reporters noted that the speaker stumbled when asked basic
questions about the legislation.
Ryan notably called the ACA system of younger, healthier people helping to subsidize the insurance of elderly, sick patients a “fatal conceit.”
But that general principle — of high- and low-risk consumers alike
pooling their resources — is a fundamental element of all health
insurance programs. Ryan also “made a series of misleading statements,”
noted Politico’s Danny Vinik, who pointed out that the speaker
cherry-picked data to exaggerate ACA premium increases.
Despite the perception of Ryan as a policy expert — a brand
carefully manufactured by friendly D.C. reporters — the speaker has
devoted himself to relentless fundraising. Records show Ryan spent much
of the year flying to resorts and huddling with lobbyists
to raise huge amounts of cash to maintain his party’s control of the
House of Representatives. The Team Ryan joint fundraising committee,
hosted by McGuireWoods on Thursday morning, is allowed to raise as much
as $244,200 per person.
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