The Senate voted yesterday to defeat a GOP amendment to the
healthcare bill, sponsored by Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), that
would reduce Medicare funding by $460 billion. There was
extensive print coverage of the vote, which generally cast the
defeat of the amendment in positive terms, although several
reports acknowledged Democrats took a political risk. In
addition, the Senate approved an amendment by Sen. Barbara
Mikulski (D-MD) on women's health.
The AP (12/4, Espo)
reports, "Unflinching on a critical first test, Senate Democrats
closed ranks Thursday behind $460 billion in politically risky
Medicare cuts at the heart of healthcare legislation, thwarting
a Republican attempt to doom President Barack Obama's sweeping
overhaul." The "bid by the bill's critics to reverse cuts to the
popular Medicare program failed on a vote of 58-42, drawing the
support of two Democratic defectors." The Medicare vote "came
not long after the Senate backed a guarantee for all insured
women age 40 and older to receive mammograms with no
out-of-pocket costs."
The Washington Post
(12/4, Montgomery) reports the Medicare amendment "would have
sent the bill back to committee with orders to remove the
spending cuts. The amendment effectively would have forced
Democrats back to the drawing board after months of negotiations
to craft a measure that would extend coverage to 30 million
additional Americans without increasing budget deficits." Of
"four amendments considered Thursday, McCain's was the most
potentially damaging."
Under the headline, "Senate Backs Preventive Health Care
For Women," the New York Times
(12/4, A21, Pear, Herszenhorn) reports the Senate "voted
Thursday to require health insurance companies to provide free
mammograms and other preventive services to women, and it turned
back a Republican challenge to Medicare savings that constitute
the single largest source of financing for the bill." The
"61-to-39 vote on health benefits for women would, in effect,
override new recommendations from a federal advisory panel that
said routine mammograms should begin at age 50, rather than 40."
The Washington Times
(12/4, Dinan) reports Democrats "successfully defended more than
$400 billion in Medicare cuts, turning back a potentially lethal
stab at the measure." Democrats "argued that the cuts --
totaling $464 billion over 10 years -- would not affect the
basic services guaranteed by Medicare, and instead would squeeze
insurance companies and hospitals that are overcharging for the
level of service they are providing." Notably, AARP, "the large
and influential seniors lobby, opposed Mr. McCain's amendment."
Politico (12/4,
Brown) reports in "response to the McCain amendment, Democrats
received unanimous support for an alternative from Sen. Michael
Bennet (D-CO) that restates principles in the bill -- that the
Medicare cuts would not affect guaranteed benefits for seniors."
Roll Call (12/4,
Drucker, subscription required) reports Republicans "vowed to
offer measures similar to the McCain amendment to try to force
Democrats into tough votes on Medicare, the federal health
program for the elderly. McCain said he would keep attacking the
issue."
McCain "rebukes" AARP for supporting Medicare cuts in Senate
bill.
Reuters (12/4) reports that,
following the defeat of his amendment to send the health reform
bill back to the Finance Committee, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ)
attacked AARP for its support of the health overhaul, and for
backing Democrats regarding the cuts to Medicare Advantage
plans.
Similarly, The Hill's
(12/3, Romm, subscription required) Blog "Briefing Room"
reported, "Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) on Thursday rebuked the AARP
for opposing his amendment to rollback many of the Medicare
changes Democrats included in their healthcare bill." In a tweet
sent shortly after the measure was defeated, McCain wrote, "I
call on seniors to cut up their AARP cards and send them back to
them!" The Hill explains that McCain's amendment, first proposed
on Tuesday, "quickly earned the AARP's scorn." In response to
it, AARP CEO Barry Rand wrote, "The legislation before the
Senate properly focuses on provider reimbursement reforms to
achieve these important policy objectives. ... Most importantly,
the legislation does not reduce any guaranteed Medicare
benefits."
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