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Grassley’s ‘Illegal Alien’ Health Care Coverage Lie Smacked Down By Finance Committee Staff


Yesterday afternoon, two Senate Finance Committee staffers directly addressed Sen. Chuck Grassley’s (R-IA) redundant and misguided claim that Sen. Max Baucus’ (D-MT) health care bill will allow undocumented immigrants who possess stolen Social Security Numbers (SSNs) to game the system and receive health care benefits. Senate Finance Committee Professional Staff Members Tom Klouda and Thomas Barthold decisively dismissed Grassley’s illegitimate concerns:

KLOUDA: We checked to see if there is a concern with identity theft in some of our other health care programs. And we contacted the National Association of Medicaid Fraud units. And they mentioned that there is a minor degree of identity theft in Medicaid, but it’s very small. It’s not one of their main concerns in terms of Medicaid fraud issues…

Some people that we’ve talked to who are experts in identity theft just think that’s unlikely that people would want to enter the system that way and have to maintain the fraud.

GRASSLEY: You know, one instance that you don’t cover is the fact that if you steal a Social Security Number and you have that number you can write and get income information based upon that number…

BARTHOLD: I just want to point out that the IRS would not pay a credit to the same person twice. So if I were to luck out and find someone who is eligible for the credit, and steal their identity, the IRS would only pay that credit once.

Watch it:

Earlier that day, Grassley slammed Baucus’ proposed health care plan for not containing REAL ID requirements or provisions that would force the Internal Revenue Service, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Social Security Administration to share information to prevent undocumented immigrants with stolen SSNs from collecting benefits. He also feared that undocumented immigrants might be infiltrating Indian tribes and posing as Native Americans, who will be subject to less stringent verification requirements.

However, Real ID Act’s requirements don’t kick in until 2017 if it’s not repealed at the state or federal-level before then and the IRS is charged with “zealous[ly] protect[ing]basic confidentiality protections that require that tax returns and tax return information be held in strictest confidence. Rather than wasting time going into the weeds with Grassley, Klouda and Barthold simply pointed out that he should really stop fretting about undocumented immigrants in the first place as it’s not worth stalling health care reform over wedge-issues that aren’t grounded in reality.




Grassley Still Not Satisfied With Baucus Bill’s ‘Illegal Alien’ Provisions


At today’s Senate Finance Committee hearing, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) announced that there are “serious outstanding issues that have yet to be resolved” in Sen. Max Baucus’ (D-MT) bill, particularly when it comes to “the enforcement against subsidies for illegal aliens.” Grassley claimed that the Baucus bill “fails the test in at least three ways”:

First, although the mark appears to require the new exchanges to verify Social Security Numbers [SSNs] and citizenship or legal status, it does not include blocking of Social Security numbers, REAL IDs, verification of address and prior year income, or any other mechanism that verifies identity to prevent identity theft.

Second, it appears to contain privacy protections limiting the use of data collected by exchanges, but it does not allow information sharing with the Internal Revenue Service [IRS] and the Social Security Administration [SSA] to detect and preclude the multiple uses of same Social Security Numbers.

And finally, I would also note that that the designation of Indian tribes as “Express Lane Agency” would allow them to enroll anyone under the age of 22 in Medicaid and CHIP and anyone of any age in an exchange without verification of citizenship. And we have discussed so often in this committee, in the past, the role of Indian tribes in verifying citizenship has been questionable.

Watch it:

Grassley’s first point of criticism is a transparent attempt to derail the health care debate by pivoting to a contentious discussion on the use of REAL ID-compliant licenses and identifications cards. Full compliance with the REAL ID Act is not required until 2017 and most states aren’t anywhere near meeting the deadline. At least 15 states have passed legislation blocking the implementation of REAL ID, others have passed resolutions denouncing it, and there’s currently pending legislation in both the House and Senate that would repeal the REAL ID Act’s driver’s license and identification card provisions. Ultimately, a REAL ID provision would affect US citizens more than immigrants as every single American would be required to obtain a compliant form of national identification and pay for the infrastructure necessary to implement an expensive national ID system.

Grassley isn’t alone in his call for the sharing of information between the SSA and IRS as expressed by his second comment. Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ) has put together an amendment that would require open-ended “real-time information sharing” between the two agencies and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Yet, there are good reasons why the three agencies operate, for the most part, independently of one another. The Tax Reform Act of 1976 established basic confidentiality protections that require that tax returns and tax return information be held in strictest confidence, with exceptions only being made for criminal cases and instances that involve determining criminal or civil liability. Nina Olson, the National Taxpayer Advocate of the IRS, has described the confidentiality protections as a right that the IRS must “zealously protect” in order to make “the determination of the correct amount of tax that each U.S. taxpayer must pay.” Tax collection and immigration enforcement efforts are conducted separately “in order to make sure that everyone who earns income within our borders pays the proper amount of taxes,” regardless of their immigration status.

Grassley’s last critique is illogical. He may as well openly suggest that there are young undocumented immigrants who have infiltrated tightly-knit Indian tribes and are posing as Native Americans in order to apply for public benefits. Ultimately, Grassley’s concerns aren’t grounded in reality. Undocumented immigrants use phony and stolen SSNs to work, not to collect benefits. It’s highly unlikely that they’ll put their livelihood at risk to receive health care coverage. It’s far more reasonable to suggest that the agencies administering the exchange track and share information amongst themselves so they can investigate any instances in which the exchanges receive multiple applications under a single SSN.

Grassley also named “tax-payer funded abortions” as another “unresolved issue.”




Why Do So Many Grassley Amendments Benefit The Health Care Industry?

grassleyisnothealthreform

Most of the Republican amendments to Sen. Max Baucus’s (D-MT) mark seek to obstruct legitimate debate, but Sen. Chuck Grassley’s (R-IA) amendments suggest that the ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee won’t support reform legislation that undermines interests of the health care industry.

Grassley, who has spent his entire summer attacking reform legislation, has offered at least 10 amendments that would directly benefit the health industry, of which he is the top recipient of campaign contributions. According to an analysis of records compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics, Grassley received the most health industry contributions this year – $223,600. Sen. Max Baucus (D-MT) was second with $141,000.

While “there is not a quid pro quo,” Sheila Krumholz, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics explains, “there is an expectation that a contribution gives you a chance to be heard by the member.” Approximately one-third of Grassley’s amendments benefit the industry.

Three separate amendments aim to protect government’s subsidy of private insurers participating in Medicare Advantage. As a senator from a rural state, Grassley is sensitive about ensuring that his constituents have access to health care services, but his devotion to the 13% subsidy undermines the stability of the broader Medicare program, from which 88% of Iowa Medicare enrollees benefit. Traditional Medicare is actually less expensive to administer and is no less effective than private plans in Medicare Advantage. In fact, according to a Government Accountability Office private plans in Medicare Advantage channel the extra payments into profit, not improved benefits.

Four Two of Grassley’s amendments replace the individual mandate to purchase coverage with a reinsurance policy that would allow insurers to pay into a “reinsurance fund” that would finance very high medical expenses. Without an individual mandate, reinsurance could protect the entire insurance pool from picking up the costs of individuals who purchase coverage after a crippling diagnosis. While ‘reinsurance’ does contradict AHIP’s public embrace of the individual mandate, the scheme would benefit private reinsurance firms (some of which are AHIP members).

Grassley also offers four separate amendments to eliminate fees on health insurance providers, medical device manufactures, clinical laboratories, and manufactures and importers of branded drugs. The industry strongly opposes this fees and is lobbying Congress to eliminate them.




Grassley Defends ‘Pull The Plug On Grandma’ Comments: Palin Said It First! »

grassleyisnothealthreform

Last month, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) was widely criticized for saying that Americans “have every right to fear” the end-of-life counseling provisions in the House health care bill. “We should not have a government program that determines if you’re going to pull the plug on grandma,” Grassley said during a town hall in Iowa.

This morning on C-SPAN, Grassley defended his statement by arguing that “there is another political leader, higher up in the hierarchy that used that than I did” and suggested that if Americans “connect several dots,” it would become obvious that the bill could euthanize seniors:

Well, there is another political leader, higher up in the hierarchy that used that than I did…And then the Washington Post, or some newspaper later on said something about Sarah Palin. Well, Sarah Palin said that presumably before I said it…But if you figure, if you connect several dots, you got, the concern about saving money in this health care bill, you’ve got the concern about a public option leading to a government run health care plan, and then you got the Veterans Administration putting out a book saying that all of the doctors have to deal with end of life issues for everyone that is in that system, and then you’ve got all of that put together. And quite frankly, between government running everything and paying a doctor to give that advise, everybody figures that the government is going to be in the middle of end of life issues just like they are in England, as an example.

Watch it:

In reality, the so-called ‘death panel provision,’ Section 1233 of the House Tri Committee bill, would allow Medicare to reimburse providers for consulting with patients about end-of-life issues; nothing in the section mandates a consultation. In fact, the provision builds on President Bush’s efforts to expand Medicare coverage to “counseling the beneficiary with respect to end-of-life issues and care options” for terminally ill patients. In 2003, Grassley voted in favor of the provision as part of Bush’s Medicare drug bill.

The Wonk Room has compiled a list of Grassley’s most egregious misrepresentations and will continue monitoring and fact checking Grassley’s statements throughout the reform process. Read the full document HERE.

Transcript: More »




GrassleyWatch: Democratic Health Bills Are ‘Failures’ ‘Rejected At The Grassroots’

grassleyisnothealthreform

In response to critics who argue that Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) is not negotiating the health care bill in good faith, a Grassley spokesperson issued this statement:

Jill Kozeny, a spokeswoman for Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, said the accusations were unjustified. She said Grassley and five other Senate Finance Committee members – half Republicans, half Democrats – will hold their scheduled conference call Friday…Kozeny said Wednesday: “Attacks by political operatives in the White House undermine bipartisan efforts and drive senators away from the table….” She also called Democratic-crafted bills “policy failures and they’ve been rejected at the grassroots.”

Greassley’s summer tour to discredit the Democrats’ health care bill certainly speaks louder than his spokesperson’s commitment to bipartisanship, which Grassley promises to pursue during Friday’s phone call. But will he be looking for genuine compromise or obstruction? In other words, is there a difference between Grassley the politician and Grassley the policy maker?

All signs point to no. During a recent interview with Kaiser Health News, for instance, Grassley indicated that he has not had “any conversations” with Sen. Max Baucus (D-MT) about his recent suggestions that the public option would pull the plug on grandma, refusal to to vote for an “imperfect bill” or statement that “the only way to get a bipartisan agreement is to defeat a Democratic proposal on the first hand.” Grassley said there was “nothing” “that needed to be clarified or straightened out” in his relationship with Baucus.

In fact, the above statement re-affirms Grassley’s commitment to obstructionism. Democratic-crafted bills are “policy failures and they’ve been rejected at the grassroots,” Grassley’s spokesperson says, on the eve of Grassley’s “bipartisan negotiations” about said policies. A more honest broker would have admitted that voters haven’t rejected Democratic-crafted bill; they’ve rejected Republican rumors about the Democratic bills.




Health Care Reform Is Not About Pleasing Conservatives

grassleyisnothealthreform

Democratic leaders say their post-August strategy is to “convince members that nothing is set in stone and that they are more than open to negotiations. And they’re engaging in a softer sell, prioritizing health insurance reforms while pitching the public option as something that’s way, way down the road.” A “softer sell” to whom, exactly? Conservative Democrats can (hopefully) be whipped into a vote, but if Democrats try to please Republicans, then they’ll fail the American people. After all, pleasing Republicans would require one to abandon health care reform entirely.

Consider Matt Corley’s latest addition to GrassleyWatch — a now daily project chronicling Sen. Chuck Grassley’s (R-IA) absolute refusal to negotiate with Democrats on the all-important Senate Finance Committee bill. Throughout the month of August, Grassley has managed to re-commit himself to obstructionism on a daily basis and today, during a conference call with Iowa radio reporters, Grassley suggested that the only way to reach a bipartisan compromise would be to first defeat the current Democratic health care proposals:

Republican Senator Chuck Grassley says there may be only one path Democrats can take to get Republicans to support for health care reform. “There’s a feeling that the only way to get a bipartisan agreement is to defeat a Democratic proposal on the first hand and then the Democrats will come to Republican leadership and then, at that point, they’ll know the only way they’re going to get health care reform is bipartisan,” Grassley says.

The Senate’s No. 2 Republican, Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ), has also argued that “the public response lawmakers were seeing over the summer break should persuade Democrats to scrap their approach and start over.” “There is no way that Republicans are going to support a trillion-dollar-plus bill,” he said. Similarly, just yesterday, rather than promising to help negotiate a bipartisan solution, Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN), Chairman of the House Republican Conference, proudly proclaimed that Democrats “ought to scrap the bill that has been moving through the House of Representatives.”

So what to do with the public option, the employer mandate, or subsidy levels? Well, it’s simple. If Democrats believe that a public option is good public policy, or that employers should continue providing coverage, they should include these provisions in the final bill. Republicans have diminished themselves to irrelevancy — it doesn’t matter what they think about the public option because they have admitted that will not vote for a reform bill.

And so, it’s no longer about pleasing the other side. It’s about increasing access, lowering costs, ending predatory insurance practices — and whipping Democratic support for reform. Let’s get to it.




GrassleyWatch: What Does He Not Understand About ‘Fully Paid For’?

grassleyisnothealthreform

Yesterday, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) — the ranking member on the Senate Finance Committee and a member of the so-called bipartisan ‘Gang of Six’ negotiations — joined the growing chorus of Republican lawmakers who are using the adjusted deficit numbers to argue for a smaller health reform package:

Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa, one of three Senate Republicans negotiating on health care, said the soaring federal budget deficit “puts a stake in the heart” of $1 trillion measures being debated in Congress….“It’s going to have a big impact on whether I’ll even support something,” he said at a town-hall meeting yesterday in Le Mars, Iowa….Still, he said, a forecast by the Congressional Budget Office that deficits between 2010 and 2019 will total $7.1 trillion calls for a more-limited measure than the $900 billion bill the bipartisan group was discussing last month. “We’re going to be looking at smaller numbers,” he said. The deficit projection also dooms $1 trillion measures already moving through the House and approved by the Senate health committee, Grassley said.

Grassley’s suggestion that health care reform would grow the deficit demonstrates that the Senator is either misinformed or deliberately manufacturing reasons to oppose health care reform. The budget framework requires a deficit-neutral health care reform bill, and the Democrats have pledged to fully finance coverage expansion from savings within the system and new sources of revenue.

Secondly, health care is the economy; health care is the deficit. Health care costs are the long-term driving force in federal and state budgets and represent the single most important factor “influencing the Federal Government’s long-term fiscal balance.” The Democrats’ health care reform will help re-orient the system from spending 80% of its dollars treating chronic illnesses into a system prevents the chronic conditions from developing in the first place. It will begin to change the way providers are paid so that we are rewarding quality care and not just quantity care.

In other words, in order to transform America’s expensive patchwork health care system into a system that covers everyone and reduces health care spending by successfully preventing and managing chronic conditions, Congress will have to invest a significant amount into reform. If done right, that investment can place the system and the nation on a firm fiscal footing and save millions of middle class families from catastrophic increases in health care costs. As Tim Fernholz points out, “health-care reform will lead to increases in GDP, reaching over 2 percent in 2020 that would lead to proportional increases in tax revenue and lower deficits. But most important, eliminating the “crazy system of cross-subsidies,” as Center for Budget and Policy Priorities economist Jim Horney calls the complex interweaving of publicly and privately subsidized care for the under- and uninsured, would create a much simpler framework for future cost-reduction efforts.”

The Wonk Room has compiled a list of Grassley’s most egregious misrepresentations and will continue monitoring and fact checking Grassley’s statements throughout the reform process. Read the full document HERE.




Grassley: I Will Not Vote For An ‘Imperfect’ Health Care Bill

grassleyisnothealthreform

The Wall Street Journal reports that, in a recent interview, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) — the ranking member on the Senate Finance Committee and member of the “Gang of Six” tasked with producing bipartisan health care legislation — “vowed not to vote for an ‘imperfect’” health care bill:

“Now is the time to do this right or not do it.” … “We need to slow down and do a little less,” Mr. Grassley told another town-hall gathering in Pocahontas, Iowa, Monday afternoon. “We need to fix what’s broken and leave alone what’s working well.” In an interview, he vowed not to vote for an “imperfect bill” that includes a public option or gives the government too much control over end-of-life issues.

In March, Grassley characterized himself as an honest negotiator, telling the Kaiser Family Foundation that “everything is on the table. … You don’t negotiate when everything is not on the table…everything’s got to be on the table if you’re negotiating in good faith.” Watch it:

Since then, Grassley has adopted the rhetoric of the far right, routinely referring to health care reform as a government takeover, disingenuously misrepresenting reform legislation, and even going so far as to endorse the “dealth panels” myth.

The Wonk Room has compiled a list of Grassley’s most egregious misrepresentations and will continue monitoring and fact checking Grassley’s statements throughout the reform process. Read the full document HERE.




GrassleyWatch: Tracking Grassley’s Efforts To Obstruct Health Care Reform

grassleyisnothealthreform

In March, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) raised eyebrows when he urged opponents of health care reform to continue lying about the consequences of comparative effectiveness research and electronic medical records. Since then, the ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee has adopted the rhetoric of the far right, routinely referring to health care reform as a government takeover of health care, disingenuously misrepresenting reform legislation, and even going so far as to endorse and sign a copy of Glenn Beck’s book.

The Wonk Room has compiled a list of Grassley’s most egregious misrepresentations and will continue monitoring and fact checking Grassley’s statements throughout the reform process. Read the full document HERE.

This afternoon, during an appearance on Fox News’ America’s Newsroom, Grassley remained unapologetic for suggesting that the federal government would “pull the plug on grandma.” Instead, Grassley blamed Democrats for his statements, suggesting that they were “diverting attention” from the health bill:

I’m not going to do anything with a health care bill that puts a government bureaucrat, or any government policy making a determination about whether or not we are going to value life and the end of life any more than at age 30 or 20…all of their proposal with end of life are connected in the bill with ways of saving money and takeover of national health care…the Lewin think tank in Washington says that 120 million people are going to crowd out into that plan.

Watch it:

But Grassley’s rant is entirely false. In trying to defend himself from accusations that he was misrepresenting the end-of-life provisions, Grassley doubled down on his false claim that “government policy” would determine the value of life. He echoed Betsy McCaughey’s assertion that “end of life are connected in the bill with ways of saving money” and completely misrepresented the findings of the Lewin report. (Lewin did not study the House bill, as Grassley implied.)

Given Grassley’s long history of obstructing health care reform, “President Obama and Sen. Max Baucus (D-MT) should stop courting Grassley’s vote.” As Steve Benen has pointed out, “negotiating with Grassley in good faith is a mistake. Grassley isn’t serious about reform…It’s time to stop trying. Grassley will only let down reform advocates in the end.”

Including sound Republican ideas is far different from succumbing to disingenuous attacks designed to defeat honest negotiations. If Democrats resort to the latter and work to satisfy stone-throwing Republican lawmakers from small states, they will abandon their principles and wholly disappoint the overwhelming majority of Americans. After all, the country would have “never gotten Medicare 40 years ago if everyone had waited for the conservative Republicans to join on board.”

Read some of Grassley’s greatest hits HERE.




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