The White House on Tuesday night
announced that President Obama would use use a recess
appointment on its nominee to head the Centers of Medicare and
Medicaid Services, Donald Berwick, before the Senate was even
able to schedule a confirmation hearing.
This way, Berwick will assume his post without having to explain
statements such as this: "Cynics beware, I am romantic about the
(British) National Health Service; I love it."
Nor will he have to answer for his extensive writings and
speeches endorsing central health spending caps and government
rationing of care to the sick, which I detailed here.
At the time, I explained why his draconian views would make him
dangerous as the head of CMS:
While Berwick would not have the authority to impose a British
health care system on the United States in one fell swoop, as
head of CMS, he would be running both Medicare and Medicaid.
Given that the two programs alone account for more than one out
of every three
dollars spent on health care in America (all government
programs combined account for 47 percent), private players tend
to follow CMS's lead. Berwick himself has made this point.
"(G)overnment is an extraordinarily important player in the
American health care scene, and it has inescapable duties with
respect to improvement of care, or we're not going to get
improved care," he said in a January 2005
interview with Health Affairs. "Government remains
a major purchaser.… So as CMS goes and as Medicaid goes, so
goes the system."
He also said that, "(T)he Holy Grail of universal coverage in the
United States may remain out of reach unless, through rational
collective action overriding some individual self-interest, we
can reduce per capita costs."
More specifically, has priased the British rationing board, the
National Institute for Clinical Excellence:
"NICE is extremely effective and a conscientious,
valuable, and -- importantly -- knowledge-building system,"
Berwicksaidin an interview last June inBiotechnology Healthcare."The fact
that it's a bogeyman in this country is a political fact, not a
technical one."
Justifying the move on the White House blog, communications
director Dan Pfeiffer
wrote:
Many Republicans in Congress have made it clear in recent weeks
that they were going to stall the nomination as long as they
could, solely to score political points.
But with the agency facing new responsibilities to protect
seniors’ care under the Affordable
Care Act, there’s no time to waste with Washington
game-playing. That’s why tomorrow the President will use a
recess appointment to put Dr. Berwick at the agency’s helm and
provide strong leadership for the Medicare program without
delay.
But this analysis doesn't pass the basic smell test. Obama could
have announced his CMS appointment at any time after winning the
election in November 2008 if it were so urgent, but he waited
almost a year and a half -- until April of this year -- to name
Berwick. Conveniently, this was after the health care law had
already passed. Had he appointed Berwick during the health care
debate, it would have exposed how much Obama's ultimate vision
for U.S. health care borrows from the British model.
Even the New York Times
writes that, "The recess appointment was somewhat unusual
because the Senate is in recess for less than two weeks and
senators were still waiting for Dr. Berwick to submit responses
to some of their requests for information. No confirmation
hearing has been held or scheduled."
Obama's~ The most "transparent" Presidency in history!
Ellis Wyatt| 7.7.10 @ 9:25AM
"through rational collective action overriding some individual
self-interest"
Excuse me for having self-interest in my health and the health of
my family. Hello private medical care.
Ellen| 7.8.10 @ 1:52AM
Another sneaky move by the president in the "most transparent
government in history." How much more can we take. This guy is
not only arrogant, unqualified, sneaky, and a first-class liar,
he is taking our country on the road to ruin. He waited till
Congress was in recess before making this appointment, because
Congress -- knowing the feelings of their constituents, would
never pass this guy. ENOUGH!
SoCon| 7.7.10 @ 12:25AM
Klein, you double posted.
Margie| 7.7.10 @ 8:44AM
Obama's~ The most "transparent" Presidency in history!
Ellis Wyatt| 7.7.10 @ 9:25AM
"through rational collective action overriding some individual self-interest"
Excuse me for having self-interest in my health and the health of my family. Hello private medical care.
Ellen| 7.8.10 @ 1:52AM
Another sneaky move by the president in the "most transparent government in history." How much more can we take. This guy is not only arrogant, unqualified, sneaky, and a first-class liar, he is taking our country on the road to ruin. He waited till Congress was in recess before making this appointment, because Congress -- knowing the feelings of their constituents, would never pass this guy. ENOUGH!