Lobbyists Ready for a New Fight on U.S. Spending - Health care industry lobbyists to seek a fix to the annual threat of cuts in the compensation paid to doctors who treat Medicare patients, like the 25% cut scheduled to take place again in January. Business groups see an opening to change the definition of a full-time worker who is entitled to health insurance to one who works 40 hours a week, up from the existing 30 in the law.
From The New York Times:
Throughout the tense fiscal deadlock in recent weeks, some of the most powerful forces in Washington, including retirees and defense contractors, largely sat on the sidelines. Now they are preparing for a political fight with billions of federal dollars at stake.
Throughout the tense fiscal deadlock in recent weeks, some of the most powerful forces in Washington, including retirees and defense contractors, largely sat on the sidelines. Now they are preparing for a political fight with billions of federal dollars at stake.
With automatic cuts to the military set
to take effect by January and a separate round of cuts scheduled for Medicare, lawmakers
will have to decide who gets hit the hardest. Washington’s lobbying machine —
representing older citizens, doctors, educators, military contractors and a wide
range of corporate interests — is gearing up to ensure that the slices of
federal money for those groups are spared in new negotiations over government
spending.
It is a debate that almost no one involved wants to
have so soon after the nasty fight over the federal
budget, which produced the 16-day shutdown and again failed to reverse the
automatic cuts resulting from previous disagreements. But Congress managed to
reopen the government and extend the nation’s borrowing limit largely by
creating a new series of deadlines that run through February, giving special
interests several chances to influence the process.
So far, the defense industry is likely to be hit the
hardest, since the automatic cuts, known as sequestration, set for January would
slice an additional $20 billion from the Pentagon’s budget.
“It’s fair to say the volume in
Washington is going to be deafening,” said Marion Blakey, the chief
executive of the Aerospace Industries Association.
Republicans on Capitol Hill are determined to mitigate
those cuts by spreading them among various social programs, like education and
Social
Security, bringing dozens of other special-interest groups into the picture.
“The perfect storm is coming” is how one health care
industry lobbying coalition put it in an advertisement, complete with dark
clouds and lightning, that ran the day the shutdown ended. “Tell Washington, no
more hospital cuts.”
AARP, the giant nonprofit group that represents older
citizens, has kicked off a million-dollar radio
advertising campaign warning that “seniors are no bargaining chip.”
Senator Bob Corker, Republican of Tennessee, said he
regretted that Congress had created a situation where another budget fight is
about to begin — immediately after a crisis ended.
“I have to believe the American people are totally
fatigued with this issue, and to be candid, I am pretty fatigued with it
myself,” he said in an interview on Friday. “It is almost an embarrassment to
keep bringing it up.”
But at least, Mr. Corker added, the focus this time
will be on how the government spends its money, a debate that he said is
important to the nation at large.
For lobbying firms, fights like this are good for
business. Their revenues in fact have dropped over the last two years because
little legislation has moved forward. Now industry lobbyists say they see hints
that this is the right moment to re-engage.
Health care industry lobbyists hope to seek a
permanent fix to the annual threat of major cuts in the compensation paid to
doctors who treat Medicare
patients, like the 25 percent cut scheduled to take place again in January. At a
minimum, they will seek to have the 2014 cut reversed.
Separately, major American corporations like the
Silicon Valley tech giants are once again preparing to intensify their campaign
to persuade Congress to pass a comprehensive immigration law, an effort that has
been dormant since late spring.
That will include a late-November “Hackathon” that will bring
together executives and immigrants without work documents to contact members of
Congress to push the cause. Technology companies want immigration legislation
that would expand the number of visas issued to foreign workers who can fill
engineering jobs.
At the same time, many of the major business groups,
including the National Retail Federation and the National Federation of
Independent Business, plan to push for modest changes in President Obama’s health
care law. They are convinced that the defeat of the Republican plan to
defund the law has presented them with an opening to seek revisions, like
changing the definition of a full-time worker who is entitled to health
insurance to one who works 40 hours a week, up from the existing 30 in the law.
“This is the time to turn up the heat,” said Neil
Trautwein, a lobbyist with the National Retail Federation.
Mr. Corker said he was not sure that the White House
or Democrats on Capitol Hill, fearful that Republicans might try again to curb
or repeal the law, were ready to open it up to revision. But that is not going
to prevent many of the industry groups from trying.
The lobbying push is likely to continue at least until
early next year, before Congress again gets distracted by coming elections. It
will mean competing radio and TV campaigns, millions of e-mails and Twitter
messages, and rival groups organizing trips to Washington by business executives
or direct appeals in Congressional districts.
The lobbying factions will not, in most cases, be
attacking one another. But with Republicans insisting that they will not back
down from spending limits set by the 2011 sequestration
legislation and rejecting calls by Democrats for new tax revenue, the cuts
will almost certainly have to hit some interests, creating unavoidable conflict.
“Everybody who has a piece of pie is now going to try
to protect their piece of the pie,” said Steve Elmendorf, a former House aide
who now runs a Washington lobbying firm that represents the defense and health
care industries.
Joel Packer, the top lobbyist for the Committee for
Education Funding, spent last week giving a series of pep talks to education
officials across the United States, urging them to get involved.
Even before the government shutdown, realizing that
this battle was fast approaching, education officials organized by the group
held a rally in Washington featuring a mock bake sale, which they followed up by
distributing bags of cookie crumbs to lawmakers’ offices on Capitol Hill. “No
More Budget Crumbs for Students and Education!!” said a flier promoting the
effort.
Mr. Packer will continue the push this week, with a
gathering in Washington that will feature more than 100 presidents and other top
officials from community colleges nationwide.
Elsewhere on Capitol Hill there will be defense
industry executives, including Gregory Bloom, the chief executive of Seal
Science, a small California contractor, who will meet with lawmakers to push
them to block further cuts.
“Our national security has become a pawn in the chess
game,” Mr. Bloom said. “But everyone needs to remember that the government’s No.
1 responsibility is still to protect its people from enemies, domestic and
abroad.”
All these appeals will make it easier for lawmakers to
get the fund-raising machines revved up again. Many events were canceled during
the shutdown, as it seemed in bad form to take checks from lobbyists with
thousands of federal employees out of work.
Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the Democratic leader,
was in Florida on Friday
for one such event, where donations of as much as $35,000 were solicited,
while the National Republican Campaign Committee has scheduled its own
fund-raising event in New York on Oct. 30.
Representative Steve Israel of New York, the chairman
of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said lobbyists needed to
remember that the budget debate was about the nation’s priorities.
“They have the right to be vocal,” he said of the
lobbyists in an interview on Friday. “But this process can’t be a
special-interest bazaar.”
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