It turns out that Harry Reid picked up a few tricks in Las Vegas.
Last week's highly-publicized report by the Congressional Budget
Office that estimated the Senate Finance Committee's health care
bill would reduce federal deficits over time included this
important caveat: "These projections assume that the
proposals are enacted and remain unchanged throughout the next
two decades, which is often not the case for major legislation."
As an example, the CBO noted that lawmakers have never followed
through on proposed cuts to Medicare's payments to doctors.
And as the Hill
reports, they're at it again:
The Senate is poised to take action on a costly bill to hike
Medicare payments to physicians just weeks before bringing a
sweeping healthcare overhaul to the floor.
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) on Wednesday morning
quietly set in motion legislation that could cost more than
$200 billion over 10 years – without cuts or revenue to offset
the spending -- on a separate track from a larger healthcare
bill that President Barack Obama and Senate Democratic leaders
have vowed would not add to the budget deficit.
So, while loudly touting a CBO report that estimates one of the
Democratic health care bills would cost $829 billion over 10
years and reduce deficits, Reid is working below the radar to
restore $200 billion in Medicare funding that would bring the
total cost of health care legislation to over $1 trillion, and
add to deficits.
UPDATE: The Wall Street Journal reports
that it will actually cost $247 billion, and Republicans are
seeking offsets.