OVERNIGHT HEALTHCARE: White House has no backup plan for ObamaCare
The White House warned Tuesday that it has no backup plan if the Supreme Court strikes down the healthcare subsidies at the heart of ObamaCare, dramatically raising the stakes for the justices’ decision this summer.
Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell wrote in a letter to GOP leaders that the administration has “no plans” to avert disaster in case of a plaintiff victory.
{mosads}If the court rules against the White House in King v. Burwell, people in 37 states would lose their ObamaCare subsidies. That decision, Burwell said, would cause “massive damage to our health care system.”
Burwell’s insistence that there is no Supreme Court “plan B” is a far cry from her previous remarks on the court case. Before the ObamaCare deadline on Feb. 15, the HHS chief repeatedly refused to discuss the case and said her staff remained focus on enrollment.
She said then, and reiterated on Tuesday, that the administration will prevail in court.
“We are confident that we will prevail because the text and structure of the Affordable Care Act demonstrates that citizens in every state would be entitled to tax credits, regardless of whether they purchased their insurance on a federal or state marketplace,” Burwell wrote.
GOP: WHITE HOUSE BURYING HEAD IN SAND: Republicans are already using the letter to portray the White House as ignorant of the case’s consequences.
“It’s hard to fathom that the administration would bury its head in the sand and fail to engage in any contingency planning,” said Rep, Joe Pitts (R-Pa.), who chairs the health subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. He said he plans to grill Burwell on more details when she testifies before his committee on Thursday.
Republicans on the Hill have also been amplifying rhetoric about their own back-up plans for ObamaCare. Senate Finance Chairman Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) announced Monday that he was working on his own plan, which he reiterated in light of Burwell’s letter.
“I’m committed to working with my Republican colleagues on how Congress can respond to help those hurt by Obamacare’s broken promises, including those in a post King v. Burwell world,” Hatch wrote in a statement Tuesday.
Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), who leads the Senate Republican Policy Committee, also stressed that the GOP was readying its own plan.
“Republicans are preparing for the ruling and are committed to helping the millions of Americans who have been hurt by the White House’s decision to illegally implement Obamacare,” Barrasso wrote.
EARLY OBAMACARE FILERS GET A BREAK: About 50,000 who already filed their taxes using the wrong ObamaCare tax form are no longer being forced to re-file.
The Internal Revenue Service released a statement late Tuesday that said it “will not pursue the collection of any additional taxes from these individuals based on updated information in the corrected forms.” Still, it says some people may want to re-file because they could be getting shortchanged if they use the wrong information.
Those who received the wrong forms but have not yet filed are being encouraged to wait until they receive new forms. Read more here:
HUGE DROP IN UNINSURED: The rate of people without health insurance dropped 3.5 percentage points last year, its lowest level in the seven years for which Gallup data is available.
The biggest decrease occurred in states that both expanded Medicaid under ObamaCare and set up their own insurance marketplaces under the law – which also signals a general buy-in of the law. Nearly all states that did both are run by Democrats.
Arkansas saw the largest drop in its uninsured rate, down 11 points to around 11 percent. Kentucky, Oregon and Washington state followed in experiencing big drops. All have Democratic governors. Read more here.
… AND MORE FROM ‘THE GOOD NEWS DEPARTMENT: ObamaCare has led to substantial savings in prescription drug costs and a strong increase in the use of preventive services, administration officials announced Tuesday.
“Our parents and grandparents on Medicare saved more than $15 billion on prescription drugs since President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act in 2010,” Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell said. Those savings amount to nearly $1,600 per person enrolled in Medicare — an increase from about $1,400 in average savings last year.
Burwell delivered the announcement — which she joked came from the agency’s “good news department” — in front of thousands of doctors at the annual D.C. meeting of the American Medical Association. Read more here.
CHIP FUNDING BILL COMING TOGETHER: Top Republicans are moving forward with an effort to extend funding for the soon-to-expire Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP).
A discussion draft released Tuesday would keep the program going with most of its current provisions – but does not set a new timeline for how long.
The effort is led by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton (R-Mich.) and House Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee Chairman Joe Pitts (R-Pa.).
The current funding stream dries up by September, which could cause 1 million children to lose coverage.
Tuesday’s schedule
HHS Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell will testify before the Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee.
The American Medical Association will hold the second day of its national advocacy conference.
State by state
Kentucky becomes last state to extend ObamaCare deadline
Idaho lawmaker asks if woman can swallow camera for gynecological exam before medical abortion
California lawmaker looks to ban chewing tobacco at baseball games
What we’re reading
Humana, Aetna predict drop in Medicare funding for 2016
More tax complications arise from HealthCare.gov
Big U.S. majority favors mandatory vaccinations
FDA wants more data on sunscreen additives before approval
What you might have missed from The Hill
HHS watchdog to investigate ObamaCare subsidies, security
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Jonathan Gruber likely overbilled Vermont government, auditor finds
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