Showing posts with label Corporate Toadies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corporate Toadies. Show all posts

Friday, October 8, 2010

Health insurers pour money into GOP campaigns, hoping to limit new regulations

The money you pay for your health insurance coverage may very well be spent by your insurance company on campaign donations, in the hopes of buying a Congressional rewrite of regulations mandating broader coverage--but not the regulation that says you have to have health insurance.

by Noam N. Levey. Posted October 5 on The Los Angeles Times

The insurance industry is pouring money into Republican campaign coffers in hopes of scaling back wide-ranging regulations in the new healthcare law but preserving the mandate that Americans buy coverage.

Since January, the nation's five largest insurers and the industry's Washington-based lobbying arm have given three times more money to Republican lawmakers and political action committees than to Democratic politicians and organizations.

That is a marked change from 2009, when the industry largely split its political donations between the parties, according to federal election filings.

The largest insurers are also paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to lobbyists with close ties to Republican lawmakers who could shape health policy in January, records show.

"The industry would love to have a Republican Congress," said Wendell Potter, a former executive at Cigna Corp., one of the country's biggest insurers. "They were very, very successful during the years of Republican domination in Washington."

Many Republican leaders have enthusiastically embraced the call to revise the healthcare legislation, vowing to "repeal and replace" the law in the next congressional session. But that call to repeal poses a delicate issue for the budding GOP/insurance industry partnership. The Republican Party thinks it has a winning position in denouncing the unpopular mandate that will require Americans to get health insurance starting in 2014, while insurers and independent healthcare experts see the requirement as crucial to controlling costs for everyone by spreading the risk.

The healthcare law will penalize Americans $95 in 2014 if they fail to get insurance. The penalty rises to $695 in 2016.

"The one thing that insurance companies would love to see are penalties that are actually stronger," said Jeff Fusile, a partner at consulting giant PricewaterhouseCoopers.

The insurance industry, attracted by the prospect of millions of new customers as a result of the coverage mandate, initially backed President Obama's campaign to overhaul the healthcare system. And insurers scored a key victory when Democrats abandoned plans to create a government insurance plan, or "public option."

But insurers are increasingly balking at the myriad new directives in the healthcare law.

Among other things, the law prohibits insurance companies from denying coverage to sick children and canceling policies when customers become ill. The law bars insurers from placing lifetime caps on how much they will pay when their customers get sick.

Many consumers will also get new rights to appeal denied claims and win access to preventive care without being asked for co-pays.

"The health reform law did not deliver the uninsured in the way that insurers wanted," said veteran healthcare analyst Sheryl Skolnick, senior vice president at CRT Capital Group.

Some insurers have said recently they will stop selling some policies rather than comply with the mandate to insure sick children.

Insurers are also fighting efforts by the Obama administration to expand federal oversight of premiums. And many industry leaders worry about new regulations that will set minimum standards for the scope of benefits they offer.

America's Health Insurance Plans President Karen Ignagni, one of the industry's leading Washington lobbyists, said several of the new requirements would exacerbate skyrocketing healthcare costs.

"The underlying problem is still with us," Ignagni said. "What we have to do now is focus on how we get to this issue of affordability."

Ignagni warned that the problem would worsen in 2014, when insurance companies faced a new tax and were forced to limit how much they could vary premiums based on a customer's age. The industry is looking to Republicans for relief.

Cigna's head lobbyist, G. William Hoagland, a former senior Republican Senate aide, said the company hoped to get a more receptive hearing next year. "This is all political now," he said. "Once we get beyond the election, maybe cooler heads will prevail."

Insurers in the past have been able to count on the GOP, which often helped shape the market to the industry's specifications.

Republicans expanded Medicare's use of commercial insurance companies to administer benefits, which has been very profitable for insurers. With the help of GOP legislation, insurers also have increasingly shifted costs to consumers through high-deductible plans.

And Republicans have pushed to allow insurance companies to sell their plans across state lines, avoiding state regulations. Party leaders have made that a centerpiece of their 2011 healthcare agenda.

"We generally support candidates whose views align with our business and healthcare interests," said Aetna Inc. spokeswoman Anjie Coplin.

Hartford, Conn.-based Aetna, which gave more to Democrats in 2009, has given nearly three times more to Republicans this year. Louisville, Ky.-based Humana Inc. has done the same.

And Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc., which was vilified by Democrats for proposing huge rate increases in California, has given nearly nine times as much to Republicans this year.

WellPoint's lobbying team includes a former senior aide to Wyoming Sen. Michael B. Enzi, who would chair the Senate health panel should Republicans take the chamber. Enzi is a leading proponent of less state regulation of health plans.

Aetna and Humana have hired former Republican aides to the Senate Finance Committee, which would also play an important role in modifying the healthcare law.

Cigna's team includes the former Republican chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, another key healthcare panel.

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Sunday, July 25, 2010

How much should you tip your Congressperson?

Find out which oil and gas companies are giving to which Congress members at Oil Change International's "Follow the Oil Money" site. There are "relationship maps" for the House and Senate showing what entities are giving what to whom, and you can search for top donors and recipients--info comes from research done by OpenSecrets.org.

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Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Who's in the oil industry's pocket?

A rundown on political bribery by the oil and gas industry from Power Without Petroleum, on Facebook here.

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Thursday, June 10, 2010

Gulf shrimper arrested for pouring oil on herself in Senate energy hearing, protesting Sen. Murkowski's refusal to make BP pay

(from the press release by action organizers Code Pink)
Diane Wilson, a fourth generation shrimper from the Gulf, poured oil on herself at todays Senate Energy Committee hearing to protest Senator Lisa Murkowski's refusal to make BP pay for the disaster that has devastating Wilson's shrimping community. Republican Lisa Murkowski, ranking member of the Senate Energy Committee, blocked the bill that would have lifted the oil companies' liability cap (the Big Oil Bailout Prevention Act). Wilson was removed from the hearing and arrested.

Wilson traveled from Texas, where her livelihood and those of her fellow shrimpers has been ruined. She had this to say:

My name is Diane Wilson. I am a fourth generation shrimper from the Gulf. With this BP disaster, I am seeing the destruction of my community and I am outraged. I am also seeing elected representatives like Senator Lisa Murkowski blocking BP from being legally responsible to pay for this catastrophe. She stopped the Big Oil Bailout Prevention Act and wants to keep the liability cap at a pitiful $75 million. This is outrageous. How dare she side with big oil over the American people who have been so devastated by this manmade disaster.

"We want people to call Senator Murkowskis office and tell her to stop supporting big oil and support a healthy environment and American livelihoods instead," said CODEPINK co-founder Medea Benjamin, who was with Wilson at the hearing. "Our members from across the country have sent Murkowski thousands of emails already. We also want the Senator to call for Diane Wilson to be exonerated. BP CEO Tony Hayward should be in jail, not a distraught shrimper!"

Wilson has been working for decades fighting the polluting of the Gulf. She wrote the book An Unreasonable Woman: A True Story of Shrimpers, Politicos, Polluters, and the Fight for Seadrift, Texas detailing her years long fight against oil and chemical companies in her community. She went on to say, "I have seen the oil and chemical companies destroying our air, water, our wildlife--and the government going along with it. Politicians like Murkowski take campaign money from big oil and then get in bed with the same oil and chemical corporations. This must stop. Enough is enough."

Wilson is also a co-founder of the organization CODEPINK Women for Peace. She was in front of BP HQ in Houston, Texas two weeks ago to protest the oilspill and draw attention to BPs legacy of negligence. Read her most recent article, "The BP oil gusher is just the latest in a long line of assaults on the Gulf of Mexico," published on Grist.org.

For more info contact Medea Benjamin/CODEPINK at medea@globalexchange.org or call 415-235-6517.

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Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Action on Campaign Finance: Call Congress for the DISCLOSE Act

As you probably know, AfD is working as part of the Move to Amend coalition to build support for a 28th Amendment banning corporate personhood and stripping corporations of constitutional rights, including First Amendment political “free” speech rights.

Now that corporate CEOS can give all they want in election campaigns, they and their lobbyists are gearing up to make certain the corporate person is hidden behind the curtain--so we don’t know who is trying to influence whom and for what.

What can you do? Today, we’re asking you to make a call on behalf of the DISCLOSE Act—legislation introduced by Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), which would require major special-interest donors to identify themselves on the campaign ads they produce to support—or attack—candidates.

In the House, the DISCLOSE Act has 114 co-sponsors—you can check to see if your member of Congress is one here. If he or she isn't on the list, call and demand that they sign on. On the Senate side, cosponsors are here.

Background: Special interest money has long warped politics and policy development, but the kind of electioneering the DISCLOSE act takes aim at is new, thanks to the Supreme Court's decision in Citizens United. Corporations and unions now have the right to fund campaigns for candidates, independent of the candidates' own election committees. What this means is not, as the Court claims, enhanced freedom of speech, but simply more corporate money corrupting our political system.

The DISCLOSE Act is far from the perfect fix. It doesn't attack the root of the problem: the fact that years of corporate-friendly court decisions have conflated free speech with the ability to buy the biggest megaphone.

But even this legislative bandage is under attack, as the US Chamber of Commerce, the National Rifle Association, and other special interest groups pressure Congress to water down this commonsense initiative with amendments that could make it nothing more than lipstick on the corporate cash cow. Make a call today to tell Congress to stand firm!

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Friday, June 4, 2010

1,400 with ties to Congress now lobbying for financial industry

A study by Public Citizen and the Center for Responsive Politics has found more than 1,400 former Congress members, ex-federal employees, and Capitol Hill aides registered as financial services industry lobbyists since 2009. Heavy hitters include former Senators Robert J. Dole and Trent Lott, and ex-Reps Richard K. Armey, Dick Gephardt, and J. Dennis Hastert.

For every sitting member of Congress, says the study, there are three former colleagues or government staffers lobbying for banks.

Today's Washington Post quoted David Arkush, director of Public Citizen's Congress Watch division, saying "Wall Street hires former members of Congress and their staff for a reason," especially at a time when lawmakers are debating a historic overhaul of the way Wall Street does business. "These people are influential because they have personal relationships with current members and staff," Arkush said. "It's hard to say no to your friends, but that's what Congress needs to do."

What do we need to do? Push for passage of the Fair Elections Now Act, for one. Public funding for a necessary public work--election of a representative government--undercuts the ability of a corporate elite to bribe our legislators with donations--or bully them with the threat of funding an opponent. And a 28th Amendment banning corporate personhood would get the toxic notion that money is speech out of our political system as well.

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Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Pay-to-play politics cuts "a hole in the parachute"



Amy Goodman interviews Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Rose Ann DeMoro, executive director of the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee on Tuesday's Democracy Now!

Sanders: "So you have the drug companies, the insurance companies, the medical equipment suppliers, who today make huge amounts of money, billions and billions of dollars, off of healthcare, fighting us in an unrelentless way through lobbying, campaign contributions, and advertising to make sure that the ... function of the system is to make profits for the private insurance companies rather than quality healthcare to all people. And, Amy, you cannot begin to imagine the power of these special interests who spend hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars in lobbying and campaign contributions on the process."

DeMore: "I think our assessment is—excuse me—that he’s [Sen. Ted Kennedy] trying to achieve a smaller hole in the parachute. I mean, I think, at the end of the day, this isn’t going to work. And what’s going to happen—the Republicans, by the way, in terms of Grassley, they’re going to fight a public option just as hard as they would fight single payer. I mean, this is the insurance companies’ influence in politics."

More on the tape!

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