Massive healthcare fraud and opioid scams are prompting authorities to announce criminal charges for more than 400 people. According to Fox News, Attorney Gen. Jeff Sessions say it is “the largest healthcare fraud takedown operation in American history,” totaling over 1.3 billion dollars in false billing. Among those targeted, 120 people are accused of illegally prescribing opioids, a practice which authorities believe is accelerating an epidemic. Opioid overdoses resulted in 52 thousand American deaths in 20-15 alone. Fraudulent Medicare and Medicaid billing was also part of the crackdown. ~ Sarah Schutte
Archives for July 2017
Don’t Walk and Text
Honolulu City councilmen passed a bill Wednesday aimed at banning cellphone use while crossing roads. According to CNN.com, Bill 6 was proposed by a Honolulu city councilman who says he was inspired by high schoolers concerned that peers were more focused on their phones than on traffic. While there are a few exceptions, those who ignore the ban face fines between 15 and 99 dollars depending on the number of violations. Not everyone is pleased with the new decision, suggesting other issues, such as transportation and homelessness, deserve more attention. Honolulu mayor Kirk Caldwell must make a ruling on the bill within 10 business days. ~ Sarah Schutte
CA Dem Dissension, Healthcare Exasperation, Hill Staffers’ Crimes Exposed
Filibuster Forcing Tortured Health Care Bill
As Senate Republican leaders scramble to find the votes to pass a health care bill, their fidelity to a warped understanding of the filibuster rules is deeply impacting the content of the legislation and the odds of passing anything in a deeply divided chamber.
The filibuster is a powerful tool by which the minority in the Senate can delay or kill legislation simply by preventing the 60 votes necessary to open or close debate on a bill.
However, a top official at the conservative Hillsdale College believes that embracing the original understanding and implementation of the procedure would provide for much more robust debate and a stronger legislative branch.
Matthew Spalding is the dean of educational programs at Hillsdale and also runs the school’s Allan P. Kirby, Jr. Center in Constitutional Studies and Citizenship in Washington. He says the filibuster is diluting the purpose of Congress.
“The underlying problem here is that Congress doesn’t really legislate in the way it was supposed to. It gave up on that, in many ways, decades ago, as it delegated its powers away,” said Spalding, who says the filibuster was never intended to give the minority that much power.
“The filibuster was not intended to stop legislation. It was intended to delay it. It was intended to slow walk it. It was intended to allow the minority to say whatever they wanted to say in objection in a public forum, in a deliberate legislative way,” said Spalding.
Instead of the traditional filibuster, which required exhausting speeches that lasted hours on the Senate floor, Spalding says the tool has become the lazy way to stop what members don’t like.
“A filibuster (now) becomes a silent veto. They no longer have to debate and keep the floor open. It doesn’t force deliberation the way the filibuster is supposed to. It’s essentially this silent killing mechanism that stops legislation in its tracks,” said Spalding.
As a result, he says the American people glaze over while the Senate plays parliamentary games instead of publicly debating the best course for the nation.
“I think Congress too often hides behind processes, whether it’s the filibuster or reconciliation or omnibus legislation rather than doing the hard work of legislating. That’s the Madisonian answer here, and in the long run, that’s the best thing to solve our problems,” said Spalding.
He says that problem is front and center right now as GOP efforts to address Obamacare are complicated by the inability to get to 60 votes to do anything. As a result, Republicans are trying to shoehorn changes through the Senate by way of the budget tactic known as reconciliation, which only requires a simple majority of votes to begin or end debate but also restricts what can be considered in such circumstances.
“The Senate is forced to try to go around the filibusters so they use things like reconciliation, an obscure budget process rather than regular legislation to get policy matters done,” said Spalding, who also says the GOP should have been crafting and debating the bill in public rather than writing it behind closed doors like the Democrats did with Obamacare in 2009 and 2010.
Spalding says two simple changes in approach to the filibuster would maker a world of difference. First, he wants the Senate to return to the policy where all other business is halted until a filibuster is resolved. He also encourages Senate leaders to embrace the “two-speech” rule, which would allow each member two opportunities to speak as long as they want in opposition to a bill.
However, once all the opportunities for speeches are done, the bill would proceed to a simple up-or-down vote.
Spalding says this would be very simple to accomplish.
“One of the reasons I point to these two reforms is that neither one of them requires a rules change. All they actually require is for the majority leader to agree to do this. This is merely a procedural move,” said Spalding, noting that those policies used to be in place before getting changed by leaders back in 1970’s when Democrats ran the chamber.
Such moves would still allow for filibusters, but would require real filibusters where lawmakers are forced to stand for hours on end to demonstrate how fiercely they oppose a bill.
“So I’m in favor of legislating but also keeping the filibuster so you can object. But if you’re going to object, you’ve got to get up, you’ve got to debate and you’ve got to really filibuster,” said Spalding.
“You force the opposition to a piece of legislation to each get up there, and they can speak twice at whatever length they want, but it does come to an end at some point. The political point is made. Everything stops. The Senate shuts down and you get a filibuster. You have the effect but it does not stop the legislative branch from fulfilling its constitutional duties,” said Spalding.
The instant concern for those in the minority now or in the future is that Spalding’s approach all but guarantees the majority gets its way and that the minority’s ability to scuttle bad legislation is limited.
He acknowledges that’s true but says there is a remedy for that too.
“We shouldn’t hide behind it to stop bad things. We should argue to stop bad things and have more politics better elections and get better people in there,” said Spalding.
Left to the status quo, Spalding says the legislative branch of the U.S. government will only get weaker and weaker.
“Congress is the weakest branch. It doesn’t legislate. It doesn’t budget. Its muscles are so atrophied (that) we should think about the underlying reforms needed to revive it as an institution, which is good for constitutional government,” said Spalding.
VA Cleaning Up, Impeachment Idiocy, Kid Rocks the Senate?
Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America praise the leadership of new Veterans Affairs Secretary Dr. David Shulkin as he makes sweeping administrative changes to improve veteran care. They also dismiss California Democratic Rep. Brad Sherman’s introduction of articles of impeachment against President Trump while California Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom implores his party to tone down impeachment rhetoric. And they enjoy the news that rock star Kid Rock is seriously considering a run for the U.S. Senate in Michigan and speculate about future celebrity candidates.
‘All Because of This Stupid Obamacare’
Senate Republican leaders are still scrambling to craft a health care bill capable of attracting 50 GOP votes, and while success appears elusive right now, a prominent House conservative still believes a good bill can get passed thanks to the pressure from voters and the resolve of President Trump.
On Wednesday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announced the revised Senate GOP will be revealed on Thursday. The first bill was shelved after several conservatives said it didn’t do enough to repeal Obamacare, while half a dozen or more moderates worried that it didn’t provide enough Medicaid spending or other federal assistance.
Democrats are increasingly brazen about their pursuit of single payer, a euphemism for government-run health care. They also accuse Republicans of seeking to repeal various Obamacare taxes as a means of benefiting the rich while millions of poor people scramble for coverage which would no longer be mandatory.
Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, says that’s complete fiction.
“It’s the rank-and-file, middle class and people that are just struggling to get by, that have been hurt more over the last eight years than in the last hundred years. They’re the ones whose health care is hurting. It’s not the rich guys. We’re not going to help them. They’re all set,” said Gohmert.
“We’ve got to help that just don’t have much, that are often referred to as poor and the middle class, that are working and doing everything to provide for health care for their families,” said Gohmert, who says those families are very stressed over skyrocketing premiums they can’t afford and don’t even provide much in benefits because their deductibles are also stratospheric.
However, Gohmert is fully aware of the problems the GOP is having in cobbling together 50 votes for anything in the Senate. While he says most Republicans have good intentions, others are gumming up the works with demands for big spending.
“There are others, including some Republicans, who say, ‘If we’re going to give people their freedom back, then you’re going to have to give us this many billions of dollars. Those people, if they want their freedom, when it comes to health care, they’re going to have to pony up tens of billions of more dollars before we let them have their freedom back,” said Gohmert.
“Really? Republicans are going to make people buy their own freedom? That’s just untenable,” said Gohmert.
Despite the rock road on Capitol Hill, Gohmert believes something effective can make it out of Congress, and he says the resolve of President Trump is the main reason for his optimism.
“One of the things that gives me that hope is having a president that says he’s not going to take no for an answer,” said Gohmert.
While Democrats expound on the horrors that would accompany a GOP health bill, Gohmert says there’s no theorizing about the damage done by Obamacare. He says he hears about it all the time from constituents.
“Business owner after business owner in my district and from around the country have complained directly saying, ‘Look, this is killing us. We want to hire more people, but we can’t because of Obamacare and that 50-employee limit you’ve got and the part time hours that were changed,” said Gohmert.
“People come up to me in tears saying, ‘Look, I’ve had to go to two part-time jobs now and I lost the benefits I had, all because of this stupid Obamacare,'” said Gohmert.
He also says seniors are feeling the brunt of President Obama’s slashing of more than $700 billion in Medicare spending.
“(Before Obamacare, if) they needed a procedure, they could get it done immediately. Now, they’re given months to wait on a waiting list. This is where rationed health care goes and it’s what happens when the government is put in charge of people’s health care,” said Gohmert.
Gohmert says he hears from many supporters who are resigned to single payer as a result of Republicans being unable to get a bill passed. The congressman says he will never concede that.
“I’m not giving up. There’s too many people in this Congress who want to do what we said. We’ve just got to push the leaders of the Senate, and maybe our own leader some, to get it done effectively,” said Gohmert.
Cops Give Mayor Cold Shoulder
New York cops made a statement Tuesday during the funeral of slain police officer Miosotis Familia. According to Hot Air.com, hundreds of police officers protested New York City mayor Bill de Blasio by turning their backs on him during his speech at the funeral. Familia was brutally gunned down in her patrol car last week by a mentally ill criminal. Her fellow officers are angry with de Blasio after he traveled to Germany one day after the tragedy to protest President Trump, a trip paid for with taxpayer money. The protest was meant to highlight how the mayor missed both an NYPD swearing-in and a vigil held for Familia due to his trip. ~Sarah Schutte
Fighting Irish
A massive pro-life crowd marched in Ireland earlier this month showing support for the nation’s pro-life 8th Amendment. The amendment recognizes the life of an unborn child, making abortion illegal in the country. There are movements underway by pro-choice activists to undermine the amendment. According to the National Catholic Register, over 80,000 people gathered in Dublin, Ireland to urge their prime minister to protect the 8th amendment. Rally organizers were ecstatic over the turnout, stating that it exceeded their expectations. The march wound its way through downtown Dublin, taking two hours to move less than two miles because of the crowd. ~Sarah Schutte
Trump Jr. Turmoil, McConnell Delays Recess, Bourgeois Brooks
Bolling Urges Trump to Drain the Swamp
Fox News host Eric Bolling says corruption in Washington has been around since D.C. became the nation’s capital but that it’s getting worse, is a plague on both parties, and that President Trump is in a unique position to uproot the system.
That’s the focus of Bolling’s latest book, “The Swamp: Washington’s Murky Pool of Corruption and Cronyism and How Trump Can Drain It.”
Bolling, an unabashed Trump supporter, says politicians have been corrupted by all sorts of vices since our founding but says the infusion of big time lobbying money really changes the game into what we witness today.
“As more and more money got introduced, the type of scandal changed and they all became money scandals. Literally hundreds of billions of dollars come to D.C. on an annual basis to find a home in lawmakers’ pockets for votes. Everyone became corrupt. Everyone became up for sale,” said Bolling.
He says many lawmakers come to Washington with the best of intentions but the system quickly swallows them up.
“Some actually think they’re actually going to go there and make a difference and be difficult from the typical swamp creature that resides in D.C. But when they get there, they realize how lucrative it is,” said Bolling.
He offered an example of how the swamp gets deeper.
“A senator’s salary is $174,000 a year. You say that’s a lot of money but not if he were in the private sector. So he gets there and says, ‘After taxes, I make a hundred grand, but I can go and have a lobbyist pay for my dinner every single night of the week, maybe even fly my family to Mexico for a vacation as long as we talk about something of material importance to my district.’
“They come back from these dinners or these trips, and then the lobbyist says, ‘Thanks for the time, but the people I represent want you to vote this way on that water issue coming up next week.’ That may be something the lawmaker was going to vote against. All of a sudden it’s, ‘I like these things and my family loves these trips, so I’ll vote for it to keep the gravy train coming,'” said Bolling.
Bolling stresses that this is a problem afflicting both parties.
“There’s so much special interest and corporate money flying around on both sides of the aisle,” said Bolling. “I’m getting phone calls from some Republicans in the book. Well, let’s call them ex-friends. They don’t want to talk to me anymore.”
While lobbyists and lawmakers find themselves entangled, critics of President Trump suggest his history of back scratching in the business world makes him more likely to perpetuate the problem than to solve it.
Bolling strongly disagrees, starting with the notion that what Trump his in his real estate ventures was anything like what happens in Washington.
“Back scratching is one thing. That’s not what they’re doing. They’re buying and selling influence. If you and I were to do some of the things they’re doing, we’d go to jail,” said Bolling.
Despite the entrenched swamp in Washington, Bolling believes Trump is uniquely qualified to effectively undermine business as usual.
“He’s going to treat the country like a business rather than how the politicians have treated the people over the last 24o years, where, ‘It doesn’t matter. I’m not paying for it. Go ahead and buy it it no matter what the price is,'” said Bolling.
He says Trump’s actions over the first six months are encouraging.
“He continues to call out and get rid of people. It doesn’t matter if they’re on his staff or are Republicans or Democrats. If you’re not holding your end of the bargain, if you’re not treating the country and the taxpayer and the voter the way you would treat an investor in a company, get out. There’s no reason for you,” said Bolling.
Bolling is also bullish on the policies coming out of the White House.
“He stepped into D.C. and he started rolling back regulations,” said Bolling. “People’s eyes glaze over when you talk about that until you realize that the rollback of the regulations is the reason the stock market is making new highs every week and the reason we have more Americans employed now than ever in history.”
Bolling says another key is Trump making good on not allowing people in his administration to jump over to a lobbying position until at least five years after leaving government service.
“If he holds by that, that’ll be a big, big, big start to draining the swamp,” said Bolling.