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Blue Dogs: WH Meeting 'Constructive,' Had 'Breakthrough' On MedPAC

Democrats on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, seven of whom are fiscally conservative Blue Dogs, emerged from the White House this afternoon saying their hour-long meeting with President Obama was constructive and that they had a "breakthrough" on Medicare payment recommendations.

The White House's proposal to strengthen the Medicare Payment Advisory Committee, which makes recommendations on how Medicare pays health care providers, won support from Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) and Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ), according to Rep. Mike Ross (D-AR), but they haven't finalized an agreement.

"We came out of the meeting with an understanding that we're moving in that direction, based on the fact that the CBO tells us that it's the biggest single item we can address as it relates to cost containment," Ross told Dow Jones.

Ross also said they agree with Obama's four main goals for health care reform, according to Politico.

"He said it must be deficit neutral. He said it must contain cost and reduce health care inflation. He said we've got to cover as many people as we possibly can, making health insurance affordable for them. And that we need insurance reform, that we've got to cover pre-existing conditions. We share all of those principles, all those concerns," Ross said.

He added that final decisions on cost-cutting measures won't be made until the Congressional Budget Office scores the various provisions under consideration, according to Congressional Quarterly.

Waxman pointed out that the entire committee, and not just the Blue Dogs, are committed to bringing down health care costs, reports The Hill.


19 Comments

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Any comment from the prez yet?

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The CoC can spend all the money it wants against the Public Option - the more the merrier - it's no longer an option

Cost is the pivot point - 200 billion. Matthews interviewed Conrad this afternoon who admitted as Jonathan Cohn and others have observed that there are any number of ways to close the 200 billion hole and make this all a done deal - deficit neutral, able to withstand a point of order in a reconciliation if necessary

Conrad's comments on the same page apparently with what the House Dems discussed with the President


I feel a little better than I did this am

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Public option is no longer an option? That isn't what Schumer says..

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I think he means "optional", as in there WILL be a public option, no matter what the COC says.

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Yes ...that is what I mean

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Is this the significantly changed landscape they were referring to before the meeting?

Somehow, I don't think they lived up to their big bold words pre-meeting.

Funny.

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Exactly my assessment.....

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just let them say they did something, as long as they didn't mess up the bill to much then it doesn't matter.

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Wait, you're saying the landscape didn't change? I thought for sure this meeting would change everything. This is very disillusioning.

I mean, damn, if you can't trust the predictions of self-important piss-ant staffers to minor congressmen giving anonymous quotes to some wire service hack, what can you trust anymore? Next thing you know, you'll be telling me the Blue Dogs are a bunch of puffed-up over-hyped blowhards who invariably end up getting about a tenth or less of what they claim they're going to demand as the cost of their support.

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In a Chris Matthews voice- "Ha!"

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I always appreciate your comments because they are exactly right on. Thanks for the laugh.

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Obama throws the Blue Dogs a bone.

(Somebody had to say it.)

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Don't throw it. Hold it up in front of them and say "Lie Down" until they earn their dry bone.

Yes, you had to say it. Someone did. Good for you.

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Let's not lose sight of what's happening here. These Blue Dog House reps are from mostly rural districts. They want two things, a pay bump for rural areas that gets them quality doctors or in some cases medical staff period, and serious cost reductions on the provider side. While those requests/demands may look contradictory they're not necessarily. And serious cost controls have to be part of the bill. We have to cut that 17.5% of GDP we spend on health care in half and it can't all come out of insurance companies. Reform is no good if it doesn't rein in the provider side too. That was the Mayo Clinic's criticism yesterday.

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Spot on dude. Excellent.

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Mark,

kin I just say how much I have appreciated being able to follow your comments that give input/analysis on the politics of health care reform the past few weeks? Ok, I said it. :-)

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Thanks folks. Sometimes it seems people see the phrase Blue Dogs and it automatically makes them see red without even reading what the article says. Ross himself said the other day that if Republicans think he and his friends are going to help them kill reform they got another thing comin.

Hang in there folks, we've got months of ups and downs ahead of us until Obama can sign a bill into law. Now is a critical time to pressure the fools on the hill but there will be more battles to come in the fall for all of us. Getting the bills passed in both houses by August 8th is D-Day. We'll win this but it's still a long way from the beach to Berlin.


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I appreciate your attitude and perspective. We need that kind of thinking.

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Egos stroked. Everybody feel better now?

What a bunch of narcissists.

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