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Bush Targets Medicare (what biased headline did your paper have?)
AJC ^ | January 3, 2003 | Robert Pear

Posted on 01/03/2003 5:09:01 AM PST by RobFromGa

Bush targets Medicare
Proposal would increase competition, include drug benefits for aging population.
Robert Pear - New York Times
Friday, January 3, 2003

Washington --- President Bush, with the new Senate majority leader as a powerful ally, will propose sweeping, long-term changes in Medicare when he urges Congress to provide prescription drug benefits for the elderly later in January, administration officials say.

In the last three weeks, the president has told his advisers and congressional leaders that he wants to promote competition in Medicare to shore up the program for 76 million baby boomers and to establish his credentials on an issue likely to figure prominently in the 2004 election.

Administration officials said Bush's vision for Medicare closely resembles proposals advanced in the last three years by Bill Frist, the Tennessee Republican who is to become Senate majority leader when Congress convenes Tuesday. While Bush had been drafting his own proposals, administration officials and congressional aides said Frist's elevation enhanced the prospect that they would be taken seriously on Capitol Hill.

Though White House officials are still working out details, Bush, like Frist, has said he wants to foster competition between the original fee-for-service Medicare program and private health plans. Such changes could eventually make Medicare look more like private insurance. Because of his long interest in the issue, Frist can explain and defend the Medicare proposals in a way that the previous Senate Republican leader, Trent Lott of Mississippi, never could.

Still, persuading Congress to enact major changes in the structure of Medicare beyond the addition of drug benefits will be an uphill struggle for Bush, even with help from Frist, because the program is immensely popular with older voters.

Under one idea favored by many of the president's advisers, the government would give Medicare beneficiaries a powerful incentive to enroll in more efficient, less costly health plans. If private health plans did a better job of holding down costs, their members would reap the benefits, getting cash rebates or lower premiums. Conversely, if the traditional program cost less, the government would pass on most of the savings to people who use it.

An administration official said Bush agreed with Frist's view that ''drug coverage must be part of comprehensive Medicare reform.''

That view complicates the task facing Congress and virtually ensures a huge political battle. Almost every member of Congress has promised drug benefits to the elderly, and the two parties could conceivably strike a compromise on that issue, but they are nowhere near agreement on long-term changes in the structure of Medicare.

''If the price of a prescription drug benefit is the end of Medicare as we know it, that's not a price worth paying,'' said Debbie Curtis, chief of staff to Rep. Pete Stark (D-Calif.).

The White House is working with an influential Democratic senator, John Breaux of Louisiana.

''Just adding prescription drugs to an outdated Medicare program is like throwing lead weights onto a sinking ship,'' said Breaux, who has drafted legislation with Frist to inject market forces into Medicare.

In June, the House passed a Republican bill to offer drug benefits to all 40 million elderly and disabled people on Medicare. It included a little-noticed provision for an experiment under which the fee-for-service Medicare program would compete with private insurance plans, including health maintenance organizations, in four metropolitan areas.

Administration officials said this was the type of competition they wanted to encourage, because it would make Medicare beneficiaries more conscious of costs. But, the officials said, House Republicans were too timid in limiting their experiment to four areas and should have tried it on a larger scale.

Congressional Republicans welcomed the prospect that Bush would lead a high-profile campaign for prescription drug benefits, but they said they were apprehensive about White House ideas for fundamental changes in the structure of Medicare. Elderly voters want drug benefits as soon as possible, but are not clamoring for ''Medicare reform,'' said several Republicans who personally favor such changes.

Bush said last year that ''seniors who are happy with the current system should be able to keep the coverage that they have now, with no changes, if they prefer.''

Administration officials said this commitment applied to people already in Medicare and perhaps to those who become eligible in the next five to 10 years. Whether it applies to people who enter Medicare after that is ''open to discussion,'' an administration official said.

Under several proposals being considered by the administration, Medicare beneficiaries would be encouraged to enroll in an HMO or in a new version of the fee-for-service program to obtain prescription drug benefits.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Government
KEYWORDS: bush; medicare
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To: RobFromGa
Proposal would increase competition

Oh ouch! Politically incorrect capitalism!
If these folks don't end up needing Universal Heath Care, the Facist left is doomed! Oh, the horror, the horror!

Heh heh heh. Strategery.

21 posted on 01/03/2003 9:29:29 AM PST by concerned about politics
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To: merry10
Reminds me of what Michael Savage said yesterday. Take any local paper and look at it and you will see mainly deviants, leftists, criminals, or the bizzare and profane displayed across the pages. I canceled my subscription to the local rag last year and have been much happier since. The real news is on sites like FR anyway.
22 posted on 01/03/2003 9:36:17 AM PST by JDGreen123
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To: concerned about politics
The Republicans are Democrats Lite. This is a perfect example. Instead of aboloshing horrible socialist programs he is proposing tinkering around the edges of them. In fact the prescription drug benefit is a major new entitlement that is going to be proposed and enacted by a our new Republican Majority. I feel so good about the work I did to get them there! Of course once it's up and running the Demmys can remove what ever paltry limitations prevent it from covering everyone in the USA. Look at how Medicare now covers the disabled, an ever growing class defined by the left in their Diagnostic Manual v. 5. to include kids who don't pay attention in class.

Has Jorge eliminated any programs yet? Will he? If we can't eliminate any programs and we need to spend more on defense because of 9/11 then maybe the Dems *ARE* the party of fiscal responsibility because at least they are willing to tax and tax and tax to cover all these wonderful socialist programs. Bush and the Rs seem to want to eat their cake and have it too.

23 posted on 01/03/2003 9:40:25 AM PST by Jack Black
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To: Jack Black
. Bush and the Rs seem to want to eat their cake and have it too.

Oh sure. Cut out all social funding tomarrow (not that I'd mind, personally) and the democrats would rule for life!
Incramentalism is how the social programs got here, and incramentalism is how we'll get rid of them.
People fear drastic change, which is why libetarians aren't presidents.

24 posted on 01/03/2003 10:14:36 AM PST by concerned about politics
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To: Dave S
Targets is a word with negative connotations; a journalist should avoid that word.

The other real headlines on this thread don't seem bad though; they are not biased.
25 posted on 01/03/2003 11:47:34 AM PST by rwfromkansas
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To: Jack Black
I would like to get rid of the whole thing also.

That would NEVER get out of Congress. At least he is doing something to encourage reform and let people choose how to pay for their medicine.

Incrementalism is better than doing nothing at all.
26 posted on 01/03/2003 11:52:37 AM PST by rwfromkansas
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To: rwfromkansas
Targets is a word with negative connotations; a journalist should avoid that word. The other real headlines on this thread don't seem bad though; they are not biased.

I agree that the other headlines all seem reasonable. Thanks to all for your contributions. Some of the better ones may even come tomorrow. But for today, it looks like the AJC is today's "Liberal Slant Award Winner" for

Bush Targets Medicare


27 posted on 01/03/2003 1:18:58 PM PST by RobFromGa
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To: Publius Maximus
Or maybe we'll be seeing...

Bush's answer to Medicare Crisis: SOYLENT GREEN
28 posted on 01/03/2003 3:01:08 PM PST by unspun
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To: RobFromGa
This should be a new FR daily feature - finding and posting the most outrageously liberal fishwrap headlines and picking a winner (or loser, depending on how you look at it.
29 posted on 01/03/2003 3:27:10 PM PST by Inspectorette
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To: Inspectorette; Miss Marple; JohnHuang2; Jim Robinson
I have thought about this for a while and I believe this "most liberal headline" idea could be a good recurring feature- the Daily Fishwrap Award, or such. It is also a great role for Free Republic as a newspaper monitor.

The only problem is that it should be oriented around major topics of the day and the most biased headlines. So it might be difficult to organize. How does something like this happen on FR?

30 posted on 01/03/2003 3:41:24 PM PST by RobFromGa
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To: RobFromGa
I don't know how it would be organized. We would need somebody who's got the time to maintain the thread, because I would imagine the submissions are going to be plentiful.
31 posted on 01/03/2003 3:48:17 PM PST by Inspectorette
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To: RobFromGa
There are some alternative plans out there now. But what they do is cut benefits that people don't realize they need and offer benefits that people think they need but they really don't.

The average individual doesn't have enough information or time to research to make the decision. Therefore Health Insurance should be relatively comprehensive.

So do they hold down costs in the short-run? Cost to the Government yes. Total costs of healthcare, I don't think so. It just means people run out of money quicker and end up on Medicaid. Or they don't get treated and end up in the Hospital or Nursing Home costing them and taxpayers thousands more.

Bush should allow Home Health's to flourish and cut through the red tape for providers. Intermittent care in a patient's home costs a fraction of either a nursing home or a hospital. The patients are happier, recover faster and are healthier.

Unfortunately the government looks at the growth in spending on Home Care and thinks it's a problem instead of realising how much they are saving by avoiding hospital and nursing home stays.




32 posted on 01/03/2003 3:52:06 PM PST by DannyTN
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To: RobFromGa
Bush's Tax Cut Plan Grows
Far Exceeding Expectations, Proposal Draws Democrat Attack

Arkansas Democrat Gazette 1/4/2003
33 posted on 01/04/2003 6:41:56 AM PST by TheBattman
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