Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
As GOP Eyes Procedure To Assail Health Law, Senate Parliamentarian Takes On Key Role
Elizabeth MacDonough holds no elected office. Few people outside of Capitol Hill even know her name. And forget about knowing her political leanings or loyalties. But she may very well be the most powerful person in Washington in determining how far Republicans can go in trying to repeal Obamacare. (Haberkorn, 1/14)
Republicans head to an annual retreat this week wrestling with a subject that many within the caucus have preferred to avoid: whether to use a divisive procedural tool to attempt to repeal President Barack Obama鈥榮 signature health law. On Thursday, the chairmen of the six relevant committees鈥揝enate Finance, Senate Commerce, and the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions committees, and their House counterparts鈥搘ill headline a panel discussion about health policy. (Hughes, 1/14)
HHS Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell plans to extend a hand today to the new Republican-controlled Congress to work together on health care issues, sans Obamacare repeal. It鈥檚 an effort to move beyond the contentious politics of the Affordable Care Act and onto issues where both parties typically agree, such as improving health care quality, strengthening global health security and improving research capabilities and innovation. (Haberkorn, 1/15)
The head of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce made a pitch Wednesday to repeal multiple taxes under ObamaCare as well to change the law's much-criticized definition of a full-time employee. 鈥淚n healthcare, we support congressional efforts to restore the 40-hour workweek to define who must be covered under the employer healthcare mandate," the group鈥檚 president and CEO, Thomas Donohue, said during the annual State of American Business address. (Ferris, 1/14)
In other Capitol Hill news -
Republicans and Democrats alike want Congress to pass an annual budget, drive down college costs and preserve Medicare for future generations. Splits emerge over more divisive issues like approving the Keystone XL pipeline, changing the Affordable Care Act, or repealing it entirely. Those are just some of the conclusions from a recent nationwide poll commissioned by Crossroads GPS and the American Action Network, two groups that back congressional Republicans. (O'Connor, 1/15)
Republicans are reviving efforts to replace Medicare鈥檚 oft-criticized physician payment formula before scheduled cuts take effect April 1, with plans to discuss the path forward at their retreat this week and a two-day House hearing the next. (Attias, 1/14)
Women鈥檚 reproductive rights are in danger of being rolled back with a new Republican-led Congress, Planned Parenthood says 鈥 as House lawmakers prepare to vote on abortion curbs the same day as an annual anti-abortion rally next week. (Zanona, 1/14)
Republican Sen. Rand Paul said Wednesday that some people 鈥済ame the system鈥 to receive disability payments they don鈥檛 deserve and later criticized the federal government for not doing an adequate job policing a system he says needs reform. During a meeting with Republican state lawmakers, Paul said fraud is a widespread problem in disability programs that help people who are injured at work. He joked that 鈥渉alf the people on disability are either anxious or their back hurts.鈥 (1/14)