Posts Tagged ‘Health Care Reform’

Cantor at Tea Party: “Not One GOP Vote”

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

Cantor was at the Tea Party Protest Thursday. He made no mention of the Dachau imagery. This was in TPM:

Cantor Promises Tea Partiers: ‘Not One’ GOP Vote For Health Care

Christina Bellantoni | November 5, 2009, 1:13PM

Cantor at the Tea Party

Cantor at the Tea Party

House Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R-VA) made it clear at the tea party “House Call” this afternoon that President Obama won’t be getting his party’s health care vote.

“Your efforts to stop this bill are being heard loud and clear,” Cantor told the thousands gathered at the base of the Capitol in what some billed as a smaller reunion of the 9/12 rallies.

“Be assured not one Republican will vote for this bill,” Cantor said, to big cheers and shouts of “Kill the bill.”

The crowd, pulled together to try and influence conservative Blue Dog Democrats before Saturday’s vote on the House health care bill, said the Blue Dogs were critical.

Cantor told them “we will try to pick up” as many Democrats as they can to defeat the bill.

Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) told them he was “standing with freedom-loving Americans” against the bill.

Rep. John Shadegg (R-AZ) called the crowd “freedom fighters” who will stop the bill.

Eric Receives Money from Health Care Industry

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

This appeared in Style Weekly today.

Cantor’s Friends

The minority whip is a leading recipient of contributions from the health care industry. Will his role as a leading critic of its reform come with a steep price?

by Peter Galuszka

When it comes to keeping big-spending liberals and big government in check, U.S. Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Henrico, often cites his steadfast allegiance to ordinary taxpayers. The rising Republican star and minority whip is a particularly staunch defender of the status quo in today’s system of managed care, although he acknowledges it’s too expensive.

On the national political talk-show circuit where he’s a frequent guest, he insists that the government should stay out of health care as much as possible. In his frequent newspaper columns and speeches at fundraisers, he says that the government-led “public option” of providing health insurance is a horrible idea.

Health care companies need Cantor badly to make their case. They stand to lose billions if the system that’s served them so well is changed significantly by reforms pushed by President Barack Obama.

And they’re paying well for the service. Cantor is one of the leading recipients of health industry contributions in Congress. He led the list in the House of Representatives for funding from both lobbyists and health care company employees and their political action committees, receiving a total of $157,500 since 2007.

The data was compiled by two Washington-based watchdog groups, the Sunlight Foundation and the Center for Responsive Politics. While there’s nothing illegal about accepting such contributions, “he’s way up there on the list,” says Dave Levinthal, spokesman for the center, which collects and analyzes campaign contribution data. Total donations from the health care industry to Cantor are higher if totaled up for the decade or so he’s been in office.

Yet back home in Richmond, Cantor’s close ties to big health rarely come up. At a Sept. 21 health care forum held by the Richmond Times-Dispatch, for example, Cantor debated U.S. Rep. Robert “Bobby” C. Scott, D-Newport News. Scott insisted that a public option for health insurance is needed to keep the system competitive, while Cantor argued against health care reform, calling it intrusive and unnecessary.

At no time did any of the 225 people at the session, or any reporters, ask about Cantor’s health care industry donations. Indeed, doing so might be considered bad form by Richmond?s business and political elite who are proud of their favorite son.

His staff says there’s nothing wrong with accepting health care funding. Brad Dayspring, a spokesman for Cantor, says “when citizens invest in Mr. Cantor’s campaign, they are investing in his agenda and not the other way around.”

Others say the practice raises questions. Whether Cantor’s directly affected by industry money isn’t clear, but “it certainly doesn’t look great,” says Naomi Sullivan, spokeswoman for the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.

Campaign records show that Cantor has accepted money from companies, lobbying groups and professional associations such as the Federation of American Hospitals, Aetna, Amerigroup Corp., Humana, Wellpoint and United Health Group. All of them have a huge stake in preserving the health care system – it’s been enormously profitable for them. According to a study by investment bank Goldman Sachs, insurers Humana and Wellpoint have the highest percentage of their earnings at risk should health care reform press forward.

This year Cantor has also received contributions from as many as 21 physicians groups, including the American Academy of Family Physicians, which gave $5,000, and the American Society of Anesthesiologists, which contributed $4,000. Other donors include drug companies such as AstraZeneca, a $31 billion drug manufacturer, which makes purple pill Nexium to fight acid reflux disease and cholesterol-reducer Crestor.

The money flowing to Congress is critically important as legislators prepare to merge parts of five different health insurance reform proposals into one sweeping proposal that could come to a vote in the Senate at the end of this month.

Lobbyists are swarming Capitol Hill trying to push the five proposals their way. Raising the pressure, health care industry advocates have spent more than $380 million in recent months to block the public option and stall other parts of Obama?s proposed reforms. Some industry money is going for television ads that try to scare the public into believing that its premiums will soar or their loved one’s futures will be decided by government-led “death panels” if Obama?s heath-care reform becomes law.

Democrats are raking in health industry money as well. Sen. Max Baucus, a Montana Democrat who heads the Senate Finance Committee, has received $1.5 million from industry groups. His committee has proposed the leading reform bill.

Mark Warner, a Democratic senator from Virginia, has received $131,100 from health care lobbyists and companies and ranks No. 7 in such contributions in the Senate. Although he took in almost as much as Cantor from health care lobbyists, he hasn’t been a key player on health reform efforts other than backing the idea of health insurance cooperatives. “We haven’t figured out why Warner is getting so much, especially since he is new and incumbents generally get the funding,” says Bill Allison, editorial director of the Sunlight Foundation.

Warner spokesman Kevin Hall says the $131,100 should be put in context against the $14 million Warner raised for his 2008 campaign. He offers one reason why Warner is attracting donors from the health industry: He’s knowledgeable about the topic.

The tentacles of health industry funding also are wrapping around consulting companies that supply much of the analysis and information that politicians cite in public debates. In a July 12 column by Cantor that was published in the Times-Dispatch, for example, the congressman wrote that “two out of three Americans who get their health care through their employer will lose it” under a plan proposed by House Democrats. For his source, Cantor cited “the nonpartisan” consulting firm Lewin Group.

Stories in the national news later revealed that the Lewin Group, in fact, is wholly owned by UnitedHealth Group, a Minnesota managed care provider that gave Cantor $28,000 through its political action committee. Another twist, according to the Washington Post, is that the Lewin Group is part of another UnitedHealth entity, Ingenix, which has been accused by the New York Attorney General’s Office and the American Medical Association of helping insurers shift medical expenses to consumers by distributing faulty data.

Dayspring, who works in Cantor’s minority whip office, says that plenty of legislators, including liberal Democrats, cite the Lewin Group?s data.

To some political experts, Cantor’s ties to managed care firms are no surprise. “He’s a classic business Republican,” says Larry Sabato, a political science professor at the University of Virginia.

Another factor is that when Cantor assumed the role of House minority whip last year, his profile and influence immediately skyrocketed and he started picking up much more in campaign contributions. Part of his job is to raise money for other GOP candidates and their causes and by all accounts, he?s done a bang-up job.

“He’s one of the most prolific fundraisers in Congress,” says Allison of the Sunlight Foundation, which publishes the newsletter and blog, “Party Time.” “We’ve tracked 60 events hosted by Cantor or ones where he was the chief draw.”

One issue highlights so-called Coffee with Cantor fundraising events in which lobbyists or others pay $2,500 to sip lattes and chat with the congressman at a two-story Starbucks at 237 Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, just a couple of blocks from Cantor?s office in the Cannon House Office Building. The $2,500 payment includes four brief, morning sessions with Cantor. “You asked for it and it?s back!” reads a recent flyer advertising the sessions.

“It’s pay to play access — for a price he’ll meet with you. Not everyone does it,” says Levinthal of the Center for Responsive Politics.

Health care, however, is not Cantor?s largest source of funding. Leading the list is real estate, which could be explained by Cantor?s background and expertise in real estate law. The second largest is financial securities. Richmond-based Genworth Financial, a major Cantor backer, is in his district and his wife, Diana, is a finance executive, and sits on the board of directors at Media General, which owns the Times Dispatch. Insurance is the third-largest supporter of the congressman. Locally, large corporate contributors include law firm McGuireWoods and electric utility Dominion Resources.

Bankrolling Washington has been the status quo for more than two centuries. The ethical issue is whether companies and interest groups are paying a politician to change his or her mind or if the official would have voted that way regardless of money. “The issue is whether a member of Congress will immediately call back a contributor on an issue if he is a big contributor,” says Sullivan of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics.

One person who may not have that burden when it comes to health is Democrat Bobby Scott, who pushed Obama’s health care proposal at the Times-Dispatch forum. He gets only a few thousand dollars each year from big health — pin money compared to Cantor. The curious thing for the Richmond audience, however, is that nothing about it ever came up.

Eric’s answer to those that lost their health insurance

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

Charity!

At the forum held with Bobby Scott and Eric Cantor, Eric says to appeal to charity if you lose your health care!

I dreamt I saw Joe Wilson last night

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

Cantor has not joined in the call for a reprimand of Congressman Wilson’s (R SC) disrespect to the president.

Joe Wilson: "Liar"

Joe Wilson: "Liar"

Rep. Joe Wilson’s rude interruption of President Obama’s speech to Congress with the words, “You lie,” when the president said his health care plan would not cover illegal immigrants.

Cantor’s Blackberry

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

Cantor issued this statement last night after the president’s address to the joint session:

Tonight the President failed to say anything different or offer clear specifics, and with that in mind the reason for this over hyped speech is strangely unclear. The President has now delivered over 100 speeches where he?s discussed health care and said the same thing. He’s held prime time press conferences, hosted television specials from the White House, and addressed a joint-session of Congress and only thing he?s made explicitly clear is that the status quo is unacceptable, a fact that we all agree on. While the President continues to blame unnamed special interests and Republicans, the fact is that the Democrats overwhelmingly control both the House and the Senate. The President and his party have failed to lead by offering reform that Americans are comfortable with. Families understand that a costly government-run plan will force them to pay more and get less.

Was he paying attention? How could he know what the president said?

Isn’t this disrespect of the president?

Cantor Warns Against Passing Health Care Reform

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Top Republican Warns Against Forcing Through Health Change

ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) — A top Republican in Congress warned Monday that using a legislative tactic to pass a Democratic health-care bill opposed by Republicans would increase public anger over partisan politics.

Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia, the third-ranking House Republican, told a CNN editorial board meeting that an American public already unnerved by the economic recession wants unified action on major issues such as health care.

Some Democrats are calling for President Barack Obama and Democratic congressional leaders to use a tactic called reconciliation to pass a desired health-care overhaul. While Democrats hold a majority in both chambers of Congress, it is unclear if they control enough seats to overcome opposition from all Republicans and some Democrats.

Under reconciliation, which applies to bills affecting the federal budget and deficit, a measure requires a simple majority of 51 votes to pass in the Senate, rather than the super majority of 60 votes needed to overcome an opposition filibuster.

Cantor said the public anger displayed at some town-hall meetings on health care would worsen if Democrats force through a bill using reconciliation.

“If they use … the reconciliation option, it would necessarily mean that a bill proceeding under those rules is not a bill representing the mainstream of this country,” Cantor said, adding such a move would make it harder for Obama to make further progress. “This president was elected to bring people together, to bring a divided nation back together,” Cantor said. “I don?t think taking that kind of action would really help” reverse the partisanship of recent years.

Cantor complained that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democratic leaders have rejected Republican ideas or participation on major legislation. “The last eight months have been ‘my way or the highway,’” Cantor said.

It appears that the Cantor tactic is to try to obstruct progress in any way possible, deploy the angry “grassroots,” and then blame the Democrats. What “Republican Ideas” is Cantor referring to?

Cantor and Health Care?

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

This appeared on cbsnews.com yesterday. This is the memo referred to below that Cantor sent out to Glenn Nye’s (2nd) district to intimidate Nye from voting for health care reform.

GOP, Dems Battle Over Blue Dog Districts

Posted by Stephanie Condon

Cantor and Obama (AP)

Cantor and Obama (AP)

Moderate Democrats are at the epicenter of the controversy and anger over health care reform, and both Democrats and Republicans are attempting to control the situation.

House Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R-Va.) has created a memo detailing the negative impacts of health care reform in each Blue Dog district. The memo was distributed in an e-mail Monday, the newspaper Roll Call reports.

For instance, the memo claims that under the House Democrats’ health care plan, hospitals in the fourth district (PDF) of Arkansas would see cuts in Medicare payments of at least $324.8 million. That district is represented by Mike Ross, chairman of the Blue Dogs’ health care task force.

In his e-mail, Cantor encouraged his whip team to explain the “impact of a government takeover on (Blue Dog) districts and constituents,” according to Roll Call.

Meanwhile, House Democrats have set up a “war room” to assist politicians put on the spot about health care at town halls, the Hill reported. The “war room,” according to the Hill, is set up in House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer’s office and staffed around the clock to give Democrats immediate answers to policy questions.

The “war room” is just one of a series of steps taken recently by Democrats to more forcefully convey their message for health care reform. The White House, for instance, recently launched a “reality check” Web site to debunk health care myths. Addtionally, President Obama’s political arm at the Democratic National Committee, Organizing for America, is asking supporters to visit their congressmen’s offices in support of health care reform.

Cantor sending memos trying to intimidate Democrats like Glenn Nye but when will Cantor have a townhall to hear the views of his constituents in the 7th district.

Group provides “Research” to Cantor about public option for health care

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

We meant to post this last week. This item appeared in the Washington Post about a week ago about the “nonpartisan” research that Cantor and other Republicans wee using to back up their argument that the public option would increase costs for consumers of health care.

Research Firm Cited by GOP Is Owned by Health Insurer

By David S. Hilzenrath

Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, July 22, 2009; 6:46 PM

The political battle over health-care reform is waged largely with numbers, and few number-crunchers have shaped the debate as much as the Lewin Group, a consulting firm whose research has been widely cited by opponents of a public insurance option.

To Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia, the House Republican whip, it is “the nonpartisan Lewin Group.” To Republicans on the House Ways and Means Committee, it is an “independent research firm.” To Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, the second-ranking Republican on the pivotal Finance Committee, it is “well known as one of the most nonpartisan groups in the country.”

Generally left unsaid amid all the citations is that the Lewin Group is wholly owned by UnitedHealth Group, one of the nation’s largest insurers. …..

Read more here

Cantor’s solution to joblessness and lack of healthcare?

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

An email he sent to the press this morning in response to the high jobless rate:

5. Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R-Va.), 8:51 a.m.:

“The American people do not support a government healthcare plan that will increase costs, reduce patient choice and flexibility, and lower the quality of care available in our country. The American people do not support the radical Cap & Tax plan which will impose a hard-hitting tax upon families and small businesses costing our struggling economy thousands of jobs…At some point, even the Speaker must realize that enough is enough. Republicans will continue to offer innovative solutions that put job creation first, and we hope that fair minded, centrist Democrats concerned about the direction this Congress has taken will work together with us.”

Eric’s answer is an innovative Solution?:

  • No to to government plan to compete with private insurance.
  • No to Cap & Trade plan as a free market solution to carbon and global warming.