Plus, what Dem candidates would pay under their tax plans.
By Yuval Rosenberg and Michael Rainey
Does Impeachment Destroy Any Hope of a Trump-Pelosi Deal on Drug Prices?
As the House impeachment probe into President Trump threatens to push aside envelop everything else on the political landscape, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi tried Wednesday to emphasize that Democrats still intend to pursue a domestic policy agenda.
âThey have nothing to do with each other,â Pelosi [told reporters]( at a press conference that she began by talking about her prescription drug bill. âWe have a responsibility to uphold our oath of office and defend the Constitution. We also have a responsibility to get the job done for the American people.â
Pelosi brought up drug prices and congressional talks with the administration on its new trade deal with Mexico and Canada. She even mentioned infrastructure. The gathered press was understandably more focused on impeachment. âDoes anybody in this room care about the cost of prescription drugs and what it means to Americaâs working families?â Pelosi said after opening up her press conference to questions. âDoes anyone care about the U.S.-Mexico-Canada agreement?â
Trumpâs focus is clearly on impeachment as well. The president took to Twitter while Pelosi was speaking to accuse her of trying to âcamouflageâ Democratic electioneering. âNancy Pelosi just said that she is interested in lowering prescription drug prices & working on the desperately needed USMCA,â he [tweeted](. âShe is incapable of working on either. It is just camouflage for trying to win an election through impeachment. The Do Nothing Democrats are stuck in mud!â
In a separate [tweet]( he said âDemocrats should be focused on building up our Country, not wasting everyoneâs time and energy on BULLSHIT, which is what they have been doing ever since I got overwhelmingly elected.â
A small step forward: Yet if the prospect of passing legislation on drug prices seems dim, both sides still do want to show some progress, and they havenât abandoned all efforts at working together. Senior White House aides met with some Democratic counterparts on Tuesday to discuss drug pricing legislation, the Associated Press [reports](. Joe Grogan, director of Trumpâs Domestic Policy Council, told the AP it was âa very cordial and productive working session.â
Still, a deal on drug prices may be a longshot: âIt will take both sides acting in good faith to get bipartisan legislation done,â The Washington Postâs Amber Phillips writes. âThatâs difficult in the best of times in a divided government. We are not in the best of times.â
Another big challenge ahead: Phillips also notes that Congress and Trump still have to agree on funding the government for fiscal year 2020. The fiscal year started Tuesday, and lawmakers have passed a short-term spending bill to keep the government running until shortly before Thanksgiving. But the impeachment push, combined with Trumpâs continued emphasis on securing funding for his border wall, could complicate efforts to reach a bipartisan deal on full-year funding bills. If they canât reach a deal, lawmakers might resort to a series of short-term extensions. âThat would seem like a failure to compromise, since funding the government for a whole year is Congressâs most basic job,â Phillips says. âBut in the middle of a historic impeachment inquiry, nearing an election year where both sides have something at stake, it is possible that avoiding a government shutdown is all the compromise we are going to see.â
Trump to Roll Out Plan for the Future of Medicare
President Trump will reportedly lay out his plan for the future of Medicare as part of a speech in Florida retirement community Thursday focused on defending his health care record and contrasting it with progressive Democratic proposals for a Medicare for All system.
âThe president intends to draw a clear contrast with Democrats: He aims to protect and improve Medicare while providing choice, even as some Democrats push for vastly expanded or universal Medicare that Trump argues will increase costs and kill existing plans,â Bloomberg News [reported](.
Trump is expected to sign an executive order calling in part for further privatization of Medicare via the expansion of popular Medicare Advantage plans administered by private insurers. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has said that it will let Medicare Advantage plans offer new supplemental benefits that go beyond just paying for traditional hospital and doctor visits if the offerings can be expected to maintain or improve the wellbeing of plan enrollees.
Trumpâs order is titled âProtecting Medicare from Socialist Destruction,â according to Bloomberg, though the [Washington Examiner]( says itâs called âProtecting and Improving Medicare For Our Nationâs Seniors.â
âWe will be looking for more options for seniors to choose Medicare Advantage and tailor different Medicare Advantage programs for them,â Joe Grogan, director of the White House Domestic Policy Council, told an Orlando cable news channel.
The Washington Examiner detailed some of the offering private insurers will be marketing to customers ahead of this yearâs open enrollment period, which starts October 15:
⢠Cigna will let patients reach their doctors over their computers and smartphones to get routine care;
⢠SCAN Compass in California is opening up options for acupuncture and massage therapy;
⢠Anthemâs MaineCare will provide patients with nutritional advice and with rides to doctorsâ appointments;
⢠HealthPartners is setting up online and delivery options for prescription drugs and providing a higher allowance for hearing aids;
⢠and Amerigroup in Texas is letting its customers pick a handful of wellness services, such as a fitness device, pest control, or service animal support.
Elizabeth Warren Wants to Tax Corporate Lobbying
Elizabeth Warren released a proposal Wednesday to tax companies that spend more than $500,000 a year on lobbying the federal government. The goal of the plan is to âend lobbying as we know it,â Warren [said]( in statement, by increasing the cost of âexcess lobbying.â
The proposal is part of Warrenâs broader effort to combat what she sees as corruption in the U.S. political system. â[C]orporate interests spend more on lobbying than we spend to fund both houses of Congress â spending more than $2.8 billion on lobbying last year alone,â Warren said. âThatâs why I have a plan to strengthen congressional independence from lobbyists and give Congress the resources it needs to defend against these influence campaigns.â
How it would work: Warrenâs plan, which exempts charitable and social welfare organizations, would impose a new tax on lobbying expenditures, with the tax rate growing progressively higher along with spending:
- 35% tax on lobbying expenditures between $500,000 and $1 million
- 60% tax on expenditures between $1 million and $5 million
- 75% tax on expenditures above $5 million.
How much money it would raise: While Warrenâs objective is to reduce the influence of lobbyists and the firms they represent, the tax would produce some fairly sizable revenues if companies continued to lobby as they do today. Warren said that if the tax had been in effect over the last 10 years, more than 1,600 companies would have paid about $10 billion total, based on their history of lobbying expenditures. The maximum rate of 75% would have been applied to 51 companies, including Pfizer, Boeing, Microsoft, Walmart, Exxon and Koch Industries, Warren said.
Warrenâs campaign released a chart (see below) that shows how some of the biggest spenders on lobbying would have fared with the tax over the last decade. Alphabet/Google, for example, would have faced a $94 million tax bill on its $141 million in spending on lobbying during that time. The biggest spender, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, would have paid about $770 million on its roughly $1 billion in lobbying spending.
Would it work? The proposed tax would likely be challenged on legal grounds. âI think any plan to tax lobbying is almost certainly unconstitutional,â Robert Kelner of the law firm Covington & Burling [told]( Time. âItâs extraordinarily likely to be struck down by the Supreme Court if not by lower courts, because it would directly undermine the First Amendment right to petition our government,â he added.
Other experts disagree, however, arguing that the current, big bucks lobbying system is far from anything the Constitutionâs framers could imagine. âThere is no constitutional right to an unregulated, opaque and informal access to the Congress or to any legislature,â University of Pennsylvania law professor Maggie Blackhawk said. âThatâs not what the petition clause was drafted to protect.â
Other objections to Warrenâs proposal are more practical. Scott Greenberg, formerly with the Tax Foundation, said that companies would likely find ways around the regulations. âOne avoidance technique would be to split your lobbying among lots of small groups, to avoid the $500k threshold,â Greenberg [said](. âInstead of one pharma trade group, create fifty separate ones.â
Chart of the Day: Dems Pay Up Under Their Own Tax Plans
Democratic presidential candidates are proposing a variety of new taxes to pay for their preferred social programs. Bloombergâs Laura Davison and Misyrlena Egkolfopoulou [took a look]( at how the top four candidates would fare under their own tax proposals.
On this date in 1869, 150 years ago, [Mohandas K. Gandhi was born](.
Send your tips and feedback to yrosenberg@thefiscaltimes.com. Or connect with us on Twitter: [@yuvalrosenberg]( [@mdrainey]( and [@TheFiscalTimes](. And please tell your friends they can [sign up here]( their own copy of this newsletter.
News
- [âA Presidency of Oneâ: Key Federal Agencies Increasingly Compelled to Benefit Trump]( â Washington Post
- [A Trump Hotel Mystery: Giant Reservations Followed by Empty Rooms]( â Politico
- [Trump Denies Report About Wanting Moat With Alligators and Snakes at Border]( â Fox News
- [Bernie Sanders Is Hospitalized for Heart Procedure and Cancels Campaign Events]( â New York Times
- [Democratsâ Plans to Tax Wealth Would Reshape U.S. Economy]( â New York Times
- [Schumer, Wyden Request IRS Audit of the NRA's Tax Exemption]( â Politico
- [Democratic Chairman Proposes New Fix for Surprise Medical Bills]( â The Hill
- [USDA Relocation Has Delayed Key Studies and Millions in Funding, Employees Say]( â Washington Post
- [CMS Saved $739 Million Last Year from Medicare ACOs]( â Modern Healthcare
- [Trump Administration Invitation for States to Design Wellness Programs Draws Swift Backlash]( â Wall Street Journal (paywall)
- [Now There Are Just Six Opioid Companies on Trial]( â Washington Post
- [To Pay $10 Billion for the Opioid Crisis, Purdue Needs to Sell More Opioids]( â Bloomberg
- [New Round of Medicare Readmission Penalties Hits 2,583 Hospitals]( â Kaiser Health News
- [Air Ambulance Services Face Scrutiny Over Surprise Billing Issues]( â Roll Call
- [It Was the Biggest Scam in Tricare's History. Now Troops May Be Going to Jail]( â Military.com
Views and Analysis
- [What Ever Happened to Trumpâs Boast of 4%, 5% or Even 6% Growth?]( â Rex Nutting, MarketWatch
- [Recession Panic May Have Passed. But the Economy Is Still at Risk.]( â Neil Irwin, New York Times Upshot
- [A Wealth Tax Is Pro-Growth]( â David Leonhardt, New York Times
- [Will a Wealth Tax Be Crippled by Avoidance Schemes?]( â Jeff Spross, The Week
- [The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and Investment: Progress, Not Perfection]( â R. Glenn Hubbard, American Enterprise Institute
- [Pelosi's Plan to Slash Drug Prices Will Backfire]( â Michael R. Strain, Bloomberg
- [Health Care Transparency Needs Literacy to Work]( â Gary Alexander, Morning Consult
- [How Americaâs Health-Care System Makes Mass Incarceration Worse]( â Zak Cheney-Rice, New York
- [Donate Your Health Care Data Today]( â Oren Frank, New York Times
- [Hit on Craft Breweries Shows Continuing Impact of Shutdown; Confidence in Government Suffers]( â Joe Davidson, Washington Post
- [Did SALT-y Voters Punish Republicans in 2018?]( â Noah Zwiefel, Tax Policy Center
- [Michigan: Letâs Tax (Not Ban) Vape Products]( â Renu Zaretsky, Tax Policy Center
[Like Us on Facebook]( [Like Us on Facebook](
[Read Us On the Web]( [Read Us On the Web](
Copyright © 2019 The Fiscal Times, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this newsletter because you subscribed at our website, thefiscaltimes.com, or through Facebook.
Our mailing address is:
The Fiscal Times
399 Park AvenueNew York, NY 10022
[Add us to your address book](
Want to change how you receive these emails? [Update your preferences]( or [unsubscribe](.