States of Personal Privilege
Senators aren't counting on reform savings when it comes to
their constituents.
By Kimberley A. Strassel
WSJ.com
How good is Sen. Max Baucus's health reform bill? So good that Democrats have
made sure some of the most costly provisions don't apply to their own states.
The Senate Finance Committee is gearing up for a final vote next week, and
Chairman Baucus now appears to have the Democratic votes to pass his bill.
Getting this far has of course meant cutting deals, and those deals, it turns
out, are illuminating. The senators are all for imposing "reform" on the nation,
so long as it doesn't disadvantage their constituents.
Getty Images
Sens. Harry Reid (Nevada) and Charles Schumer (New York) are among
those inserting goodies for their states.
A central feature of the Baucus bill is the vast expansion of state Medicaid
programs. This is necessary, we are told, to cover more of the nation's
uninsured. The provision has angered governors, since the federal government
will cover only part of the expansion and stick fiscally strapped states with an
additional $37 billion in costs. The "states, with our financial challenges
right now, are not in a position to accept additional Medicaid
responsibilities," griped Democratic Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland.
Poor Mr. Strickland. If only he lived in . . . Nevada! Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid, who is worried about losing his seat next year, worked out a deal by
which the federal government will pay all of his home state's additional
Medicaid expenses for the next five years. Under the majority leader's very
special formula, only three other states—Oregon, Rhode Island and
Michigan—qualify for this perk, on the grounds, as Mr. Reid put it recently on
the Senate floor, that they "are suffering more than most."
Tell that to Mr. Strickland, who is still trying to figure out how to close
an $850 million budget hole, in a state with near 11% unemployment. And tell it
to Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander, who quipped: "I wonder how citizens in
Wyoming, in California and Florida and other states will feel if they pay more
taxes so that Nevadans can pay less taxes."
To pay the bill for his version of ObamaCare, Mr. Baucus's legislation would
tax high-value insurance plans—a 40% tax on plans that cost more than $21,000 a
year. Democrats argue it is reform to make those who can afford "luxury" health
care chip in for those who can't afford any at all.
That is, unless you live in a state such as New York. That state, along with
some others, has many high-value plans—in part because it boasts a lot of union
members with "Cadillac" plans, in part because the state has imposed so many
insurance regulations that even skimpy plans are expensive. Sen. Chuck Schumer
didn't want a lot of angry overtaxed New Yorkers on his hands, so he and other
similarly situated Democrats carved out a deal by which the threshold for this
tax will be higher in their states. If you live in Kentucky, you get taxed at
$21,000. If you live in Massachusetts you don't get taxed until $25,000. This
carve-out is at least more sweeping, applying to 17 (largely blue) states,
though that's cold comfort if you live in Louisville.
Mr. Baucus will also pay for his bill by socking it to pharmaceutical
companies, on the principle that drug companies are filthy rich and should have
to contribute to health care. The view is a bit different in New Jersey. The
state's Web site boasts it is the "global epicenter" of the drug industry, where
"15 of the world's 20 largest pharmaceutical companies have major facilities."
And Sen. Bob Menendez, of the Garden State, seems concerned that his home-state
employers are going to struggle to both pay their federal liabilities and to
continue to grow and innovate. Thus Mr. Menendez's quiet deal for a $1 billion
tax credit for companies investing in drug R&D.
The Baucus bill, we are assured by many Dems, will successfully "bend down"
the health-care cost curve. Michigan Sen. Debbie Stabenow isn't counting on it
when it comes to her constituents. She and Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry
included $5 billion in the bill for a reinsurance program designed to defray the
medical costs of union members.
"This will help our employers, whether it's the auto industry or whether it's
other industries, be able to lower their costs for early retirees," said Ms.
Stabenow. She is apparently unaware that this is what the broader bill is
supposed to do, even without $5 billion in union slush money.
So, health-care "reform" is good, smart and necessary, so long as it isn't
fully applied to the states of the senators who are pushing it. The Democrats'
growing problem is that somebody is ultimately going to have to pay, and Mr.
Reid's bad example has given every one the same idea. "If Colorado has a fair
claim on being treated the same way Nevada has been, of course we're going to
ask to have that kind of treatment," promised Sen. Mark Udall, upon news of the
Reid deal.
Most senators are saving up their special state demands for when the bill
hits the Senate floor. At that point, we'll get an even better idea of how much
health-care change Democrats truly believe in.
Write to kim@wsj.com
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