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Message -- Continuation of the National Emergency with Respect to Iran

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For Immediate Release March 12, 2013 Message -- Continuation of the National Emergency with Respect to Iran

TO THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES:

Section 202(d) of the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1622(d)) provides for the automatic termination of a national emergency unless, within 90 days prior to the anniversary date of its declaration, the President publishes in the Federal Register and transmits to the Congress a notice stating that the emergency is to continue in effect beyond the anniversary date. In accordance with this provision, I have sent to the Federal Register for publication the enclosed notice stating that the national emergency with respect to Iran that was declared on March 15, 1995, is to continue in effect beyond March 15, 2013.

The crisis between the United States and Iran resulting from the actions and policies of the Government of Iran has not been resolved. The actions and policies of the Government of Iran are contrary to the interests of the United States in the region and continue to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States. For these reasons, I have determined that it is necessary to continue the national emergency declared with respect to Iran and to maintain in force comprehensive sanctions against Iran to deal with this threat.

BARACK OBAMA

Extending Middle Class Tax Cuts

Blog posts on this issue March 13, 2013 4:36 PM EDTThe Economic Case for Commonsense Immigration Reform

Director of the National Economic Council Gene Sperling outlines the economic case for a fair, effective and common-sense immigration system that strengthens our economy and the middle class.

March 13, 2013 3:49 PM EDTFirst Lady Michelle Obama Challenges America's CEOs To Be Bold in Finding Ways to Hire VeteransFirst Lady Michelle Obama Challenges America's CEOs To Be Bold in Finding Ways to Hire Veterans

The First Lady met today with the Business Roundtable to talk about Joining Forces, her initiative that supports veterans and military families.

March 13, 2013 10:45 AM EDTSunshine Week: In Celebration of Civic EngagementSunshine Week: In Celebration of Civic Engagement

As part of our Sunshine Week series, Macon Phillips discusses We the People.

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Be wary of for-profit colleges' charm offensive

This week, members of the Association for Private Sector Colleges and Universities (APSCU) are visiting Capitol Hill, hoping to put a good face on the for-profit college industry. No doubt APSCU leaders are touting the academic and vocational courses they offer and the successes of their students. They are probably plugging the special programs created for active-duty military, veterans and their families.
However, there are many facts they don’t bother telling Congress. Among them: taxpayers spend twice as much to send a veteran to a for-profit college than they do to a public or non-profit college. For-profit colleges have collected nearly one-third of all Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits ($1.6 billion). And, many for-profit schools’ earnings continue to come almost entirely from federal funds.

APSCU isn’t talking about the for-profits’ dramatically high dropout rates and dismal student outcomes; or their high-pressure, misleading, and aggressive marketing tactics; or their exorbitant tuitions; or the huge debt students acquire. For example, where a bachelor’s degree from a state university might cost as little as $24,000, a similar degree from a for-profit could cost as much as $88,000.
Student vets are particularly desirable sources of income because of their enthusiasm to gain a higher education, their GI Bill and other federal funds, and their access to loans. What is more, GI Bill dollars are not counted toward the federal cap on for-profit companies’ access to federal education aid (the so-called “90/10 loophole”). Each enrolled veteran gives a for-profit college unique access to tens of thousands of GI Bill dollars intended to help them get an education and launch their careers. Instead, these monies enrich the for-profit schools and leave our veterans high and dry. ?

APSCU isn’t telling Congress that many of these taxpayer-dependent schools promise high-quality educations and “guaranteed jobs,” neither of which is delivered.  However, the student vets not only exhaust their GI benefits but also build up mountains of student loan debt while often receiving non-transferable credits, worthless degrees or no degrees at all.
In February, the APSCU acknowledged that there are serious problems in its industry, issuing the “Report of the APSCU Blue Ribbon Taskforce for Military and Veteran Education,” which called for various reforms to its recruitment and enrollment practices.
The industry is undoubtedly promoting this report as a panacea that will curtail unsavory practices. But that would be a disingenuous obfuscation of the truth. It merely glosses over the most serious issues and fails to address the predatory practices of unscrupulous companies aggressively targeting veterans.
The APSCU’s lobbying is part of its multi-million dollar campaign to hinder legislation and regulations that would close loopholes that allow them to continue taking advantage of taxpayers and student vets.
We ask Congress to look behind the curtain and see what the for-profit education industry is doing, not what APSCU’s leadership is saying. Members of Congress should protect our service men and women just as resolutely as they protected this nation.
Like many other vets, Theodore Gatti, Chad Putnam and Mae McGarry served in Iraq and Afghanistan and, when they came home, were entangled in a maze of for-profit schools’ empty promises. This Fall, they were among the recipients of aid from the Veterans' Student Loan Relief Fund, which provides grants up to $5,000 to qualified vets to help them dig out from under the debt burden accumulated.
Congress and the Obama Administration have begun to take steps to better defend our veterans from these predatory practices. The president issued an Executive Order and Congress passed bipartisan legislation – both measures require for-profit colleges to disclose more information about costs, financing, graduation rates and job placement rates.
On the local level, states’ Attorneys General in numerous states are mounting efforts to crack down on predatory practices. And, last year, California Governor Jerry Brown signed legislation that closed various loopholes that these schools have exploited.
These are good first steps.
We call on Congress to stay vigilant, provide student vets the opportunity to go to community colleges where they have been stationed, and demand that all colleges, universities, and technical training schools deliver a high-quality education worthy of our veterans’ service to America.
And finally, we invite APSCU to look beyond its members’ narrow financial interests and join us in honoring the men and women who serve this nation.
Boulay is director of the Veterans’ Student Loan Relief Fund.

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The Affordable Care Act Negatively Impacts the Supply of Labor

Labor market distortions are common within the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA/Obamacare). Employers are faced with uncertainty at every turn. As observed from the recently released Federal Reserve beige book, this uncertainty restrains hiring.[1]

While substantial attention has been given to the employer side, the employee side also experiences many distortionary effects. Some of these distortions include incentives to reduce hours, not seek work, drop insurance coverage, drop dependent coverage, become divorced, or avoid marriage. It is apparent that Obamacare’s effects extend far past the number of employees a business will employ, or how many hours a week an employee will be allowed to work.

Obamacare Taxes and the Supply of Labor

Obamacare will negatively affect the reward to work for many workers, as noted by University of Chicago economist, Casey Mulligan. According to Mulligan, “The net result of all of this will be to reduce employment, especially among less skilled people.”[2]  Many individuals will be left facing tough decisions on whether or not to take a higher paying job or losing thousands of dollars in health care subsidies.[3]

When an individual faces higher tax rates, if they currently have a job, they may roll back on hours worked. Subsidies also have this sort of effect. According to Mulligan, “The [Affordable Care Act’s] subsidies will sharply reduce the financial reward to working because they will be phased out with household income.”

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) also agrees, stating, “The expansion of Medicaid and the availability of subsidies through the exchanges will effective increases beneficiaries’ financial resources. Those additional resources will encourage some people to work fewer hours or to withdraw from the labor market.” The CBO found that the legislation would reduce amount of labor by half a percent.[4]  

Under the Affordable Care Act’s system of subsidies, as an individual makes more money, they are rewarded by losing subsidies. This creates a calculation that each person must make—whether or not to strive to increase their personal household income through working more or getting a better job, or choosing to stay in a similar place in life in order to keep the benefits.

In November 2012, the CBO estimated the increase in marginal tax rates due to Obamacare, adding evidence to Mulligan’s claim. According to the CBO, the introduction of the Medicaid expansion and the exchange subsidies would increase marginal tax rates for more individuals. Populations that have Medicaid face marginal tax rates above 75 percent in many instances. In terms of exchange subsides, for income between 100 percent and 133 percent of the poverty level, tax rates increase by 2 percent. For income between 133 percent and 400 percent of the poverty level, increases vary between 9.5 percent and 18 percent.[5]

Compared to previous law, individuals now experience even higher marginal tax rates from the ability to garnish health care subsidies at lower income. Obamacare ultimately discourages low income individuals from trying to move into higher paying jobs on the margin.

Low-wage workers are especially affected, because they are most responsive to higher tax rates or lower subsidies. The CBO believes that low-income workers have higher labor elasticies.[6] Low income workers will respond to changes in tax rates more intensely on the margin than individuals with higher incomes. Not only are marginal rates higher, but lower income individuals are expected to respond more vigorously to the changes. This effect could be further exasperated through the incentives for employers to drop coverage to lowering income employees.[7]

Dependent Coverage and Obamacare’s Treatment of Marriage

Several analysts point out that Obamacare develops a marriage penalty.[8] Simply put, individuals lose subsidies if they choose to marry without any change to earnings. Representative Darrel Issa (R­–CA) points out a simple explanation and example: “The result of linking the tax credit to the federal poverty level is that two individuals who make between $61,600 and $91,200 in 2014 will not benefit from the tax credit if they decide to marry.”

While this example only shows one case, it is true that most individuals that previously obtained exchange subsidies would lose some subsidies when becoming married. For a couple that has two individual earners between 100 percent and 400 percent of the Federal Poverty Level, choosing to get married would experience further increases in effective marginal tax rates—between 10 percent and 24 percent.[9]

The extension of dependent coverage in Obamacare attacks the labor market from several angles. First, young adults are discouraged from entering the labor force due to the law’s implementation. Heritage analysis shows that individuals can be as much as 15 percent more unlikely to be part of the labor force after the dependent coverage provision went into effect.[10]

This behavior makes the most sense for low-income earners where the benefit will be relatively large compared to the wage earned. While it is not necessarily true that a young adult would lose their dependent coverage upon getting a job of their own, this consideration could be coming into play, as well as a general decision to utilize the benefit to stay in school, or pursue other activities.

A second effect, as outlined in a previous Heritage Issue Brief, outlines the incentive for individuals dropping their own name coverage for dependent coverage.[11] Ultimately, this leads to increased incentives for employers to drop coverage, either by pushing employees to the exchanges indirectly or paying the penalty and adjusting benefits accordingly.

Labor Market Distortions Still to Come

Obamacare distorts incentives for employees to make positive changes in the labor market. Employees are encouraged to keep lower paying jobs in order to preserve subsidies, while also being encouraged to remain single, leave the labor force, or even not participate in the labor force.

While many economists and officials suggest that the Affordable Care Act will not result in drastic labor market distortions when it is fully implemented, basic economic evaluation of the situation shows that these distortions will occur. If the most recent Federal Reserve beige book’s further revelations about slow labor market recovery is any foreshadowing to what is to come, the United States labor market is in for rude surprise in the coming years.[12]

—Drew Gonshorowski is Policy Analyst in the Center for Data Analysis at The Heritage Foundation.


[10]Analysis Conducted by Author in Forthcoming Brief.

[12]Federal Reserve District, “Current Economic Conditions.”


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Raising the game for energy efficiency

By C. David Myers, president, Johnson Controls Building Efficiency - 03/13/13 04:00 PM ET

President Barack Obama later this week will focus on his goal to secure America’s energy future with efforts to find new fuel sources, invest in the development of alternative energy and use our resources more efficiently. The cleanest and lowest cost way to meet our energy needs is to consume less. Strong financial paybacks are the biggest incentives for state and federal governments to raise the game by putting the right tools and policies in place to increase investment in energy efficiency, which will save money, produce jobs and reduce carbon pollution.

To raise the bar, federal and state governments should set ambitious, yet achievable, goals for energy efficiency improvements in buildings. Buildings consume approximately 40 percent of U.S. energy. It can be done. For example, at the landmark Empire State Building, built in the early 1930s, the retrofit project underway is on track to achieve a 38 percent reduction in energy consumption with a three-year payback.

Additionally, governments can and should also lead by example by renovating and upgrading the energy performance of their own existing buildings and leased space, and constructing new buildings to high efficiency standards. 

To provide further perspective, building energy efficiency retrofits is a nearly $280 billion dollar investment opportunity that can save building owners more than $1 trillion over 10 years, according to industry research. All of that work also means more jobs at a critical time for our economy. Raising the bar also means raising minimum building performance, consumer awareness and private investment.

In his first term, President Obama committed to invest $2 billion in federal government building renovations using energy savings performance contracting. Using this approach, energy services companies design, finance, install, and maintain new energy efficient equipment in facilities – at no upfront cost to the taxpayer. The energy savings are guaranteed by the contractor with the investment paid back over time from the money saved on utility bills. Over 260 federal government projects have been successfully completed over the past decade attracting over $2.3 billion in private sector investment.

We must also raise the level of energy efficiency by improving energy efficiency standards for new construction and during major building renovations.  States should be encouraged and supported in adopting and enforcing the most recent national model building codes and appliance/equipment standards. Providing incentives, which cover a portion of the incremental cost for “above code” construction, can be a cost-effective way to capture additional efficiency opportunities.

To make inroads with improving energy efficiency, we must raise awareness of building performance and the opportunities to create positive financial returns. Cities and states should require the disclosure of building energy performance information. Why is it that we have more energy efficiency performance data about our cars and appliances than we do our longest term investments – our homes and buildings?  A simple and understandable label would create awareness and market demand for more efficient buildings.

Where there is market demand, there needs to be a corresponding supply. What is certainly in short supply these days is public funding to support additional investments in energy efficiency. President Obama has proposed $200 million in funding for a Race to the Top challenge for states that implement policies to increase energy efficiency. This is a start, but we need to develop and expand private-sector financing models, like the successful performance contracting model in the public sector, and leverage the $200 million to start attracting the billions of dollars needed to tap the most cost-effective improvement opportunities.

A particularly good model is Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE) financing which offers long-term loans, limited up-front investment requirements, and low interest rates for commercial building energy efficiency improvements. Building owners get the added benefit of being able to pass payments through to tenants and transfer the loan to new building owners at the time of sale.

There is much more work to be done, but if we raise our game with strong leadership, smart policies, increased awareness and increased private investment, we can save more money, create more jobs and help protect our environment for future generations. All of this can be accomplished and provide a strong financial return.

Myers is president of Johnson Controls Building Efficiency.

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Medicare’s Demographic Challenge—and the Urgent Need for Reform

Despite the government’s promises to maintain “Medicare as we know it,” the program is already changing. In addition to reduced funding and complex new regulations, Medicare faces enormous demographic shifts: The first wave of the massive baby boom generation is now eligible for Medicare enrollment. Current taxpayers already pay almost nine out of every 10 dollars in total Medicare costs in any given year, and general revenues will account for an increasingly larger share of Medicare spending. The best solution is structural Medicare reform based on a defined-contribution (“premium support”) program of financing, and gradually increasing the eligibility age. Competition among plans and providers, driven by personal choice, will not only secure better value for Medicare dollars, but will also reduce the growth in Medicare spending.

Americans should ignore false promises to keep “Medicare as we know it”—the program is already changing. Under the misnamed Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010, Congress and President Barack Obama have already enacted big reductions in Medicare funding (amounting to $716 billion over the next 10 years[1]), as well as complex new rules governing federal reimbursements to doctors and hospitals. But beyond the changes wrought by the new health care law, Medicare is facing enormous demographic changes: The first wave of the massive baby boom generation—the 77 million people born between 1946 and 1964—is now becoming eligible for Medicare enrollment.

The sheer number of beneficiaries is projected to grow from 50.7 million in 2012 to 81 million in 2030.[2] This will create an unprecedented demand for technologically advancing medical services in the 21st century. Current taxpayers already pay almost nine out of every 10 dollars in total Medicare costs in any given year, and general revenues will account for an increasingly larger share of Medicare spending [3] In other words, current and future taxpayers are being saddled with enormous obligations.

Fastest-Growing Part of Federal Budget 

In the near term, Congress and the Administration should undertake a series of changes to the current program that would alleviate the fiscal impact of these demographic pressures. Such initiatives would include (1) gradually raising the age of eligibility for Medicare (and Social Security) to 68; (2) repealing existing penalties for late enrollment in Medicare for those who remain in private, employer-based coverage; and (3) tax relief for employees (and their employers) for those workers who continue to work beyond the standard retirement age.

The long-term solution to the demographic challenge is a full transition of Medicare to a program based on defined-contribution (“premium support”) financing. The per-capita government payment to health plans, including traditional Medicare, would be centered on a market-based bidding for the provision of traditional Medicare benefits. Plans and providers would thus compete to provide the best package of guaranteed benefits at the most competitive price. This would not only spur innovation in the delivery of medical services, but would also secure value for the Medicare dollars. Intense competition would slow the growth of Medicare spending, and secure program savings that would, over time, benefit Medicare recipients and taxpayers alike.

Medicare spending is projected to rise significantly over the next 25 years as the baby boomers enroll in the program. Under the most realistic scenario, the Medicare Trustees project that Medicare spending will rise from 3.7 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2011 to 7 percent of GDP in 2040, and 10.3 percent of GDP in 2085.[4]

A major reason for the future growth in health care programs’ spending is the aging population. While the costs per beneficiary are rising, it is the sheer number of eligible beneficiaries that is driving Medicare costs up so dramatically. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) states that “[t]hrough 2022, the aging of the population will cause spending on the major health care programs and Social Security to rise significantly.... In fact, during that period, almost all of the projected growth in such spending as a share of GDP is effectively the result of aging.”[5]

Through 2037, under the alternative fiscal scenario, which uses more realistic assumptions, the CBO attributes 52 percent of the reason for projected growth of this magnitude to the aging population, with the other 48 percent attributed to excess health care cost growth. Under the budget scenario that reflects current law, the CBO holds aging responsible for 60 percent of the cause in spending growth.[6] 

 Longer Life Expectancy Means Longer Enrollment

The massive projected increase in Medicare spending and enrollment is contributing to financing shortfalls. The hospital insurance trust fund, which funds Medicare Part A, has been running deficits each year since 2008 and is projected to be exhausted by 2024.[7] Moreover, under a more realistic scenario, Medicare has a long-term unfunded obligation of $37 trillion; in other words, Medicare will have promised seniors and disabled citizens $37 trillion worth of unpaid benefits.[8] Once again, this means that taxpayers are faced with increasing burdens, the sheer size of which they can barely imagine.

Today’s Medicare eligibility standards are rooted in the entitlement policies of the 1930s and the 1960s. When Social Security was enacted in 1935, the average American life span was 62 years, but Congress and President Franklin D. Roosevelt set the retirement age at 65. In 1961, Congress and President John F. Kennedy established an early retirement eligibility at age 62, allowing early retirees to collect a reduced Social Security benefit.

Labor force participation among older workers changed in part due to the introduction of the Social Security entitlement. In 1930, 60 percent of men aged 65 and above who could work did so; and virtually everyone in the 1940s and 1950s who left the workforce did so because of necessity, that is, a job loss, or unemployment related to poor health or incapacity.[9] By the 1960s and 1970s, between 20 percent and 30 percent of American workers said that they retired because they wanted to do so.[10] Since the 1960s, the number of men who are 65 or older and still in the workforce has shrunk to one out of six.[11]

Number of Workers per Medicare Beneficiary is falling

In 1965, when Congress and President Lyndon B. Johnson enacted Medicare, they retained Social Security’s standard retirement age of 65 as the age of eligibility for Medicare. By 1965, however, the average life expectancy had increased to 70.2 years. By 2008, the average life span was 77.8 years, and is projected to reach 81.5 years by 2030.[12] In 2009, Americans had already exceeded the life expectancy that the Medicare Trustees had projected for 2025.[13]

Meanwhile, fewer children have been born to support America’s much larger and older retired population. Between 1973 and 1988, the U.S. fertility rate stabilized at 1.8 to 1.9 births per woman, compared to the 2.1 lifetime births per woman required to maintain a constant population.[14] In other words, the baby boomers did not replace themselves.

A related development is the decline in the ratio of workers to retirees, which is critically important because current workers pay for current beneficiaries through the Medicare payroll tax. When Medicare first began in 1965, there were 4.5 workers per beneficiary. The ratio has since declined, standing at 3.3 workers in 2011, and is projected to decline further to just 2.3 workers per beneficiary by 2030. For a perspective on the magnitude of this demographic shift, consider the fact that in 1950, there were 16 persons working and paying taxes to support one person drawing Social Security benefits.[15]

In 1983, Congress and President Ronald Reagan, following a report from the Greenspan Commission, gradually raised the standard retirement age for Social Security from 65 to 67. Today, people born in 1937 or before retain the legal right to collect full benefits at age 65. For those born between 1943 and 1954, the retirement age is 66. For those born in 1960 or later, the retirement age is 67.

As a matter of social policy, it is worth noting that surveys show a positive relationship between work and health and happiness.[16] Congress should not ignore the potential social benefits of greater workforce participation among older Americans.

The CBO has already estimated that this limited change will increase American workforce participation for those aged 65 and above.[17] Such a policy would not only help to improve Medicare’s financing, it would also provide stronger incentives for seniors to increase their retirement savings and contribute to overall economic growth.[18]

The CBO has also projected the budgetary impact of a gradual increase in the age of Medicare eligibility from 65 to 67 for the tail end of the baby boom generation. By raising the age of eligibility by two months every year, beginning for those baby boomers born in 1949, it would reach 67 for those born in 1960. This change would save $148 billion in Medicare spending between 2012 and 2021.[19]

A bipartisan consensus is emerging on raising the age of Medicare eligibility. The Business Roundtable, an association of leading American companies, has recently proposed that Medicare’s age of eligibility should be increased to 70, while not affecting any person today who is 55 or older[20] The American Hospital Association supports gradually raising the eligibility age to 67.[21] In addition, Senator Orrin Hatch (R–UT) recently proposed raising the eligibility age to 67 in a major speech on the Senate floor, as a key entitlement reform that should be a part of any deficit reduction package.[22] Likewise, Alice Rivlin, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and former director of the Congressional Budget Office, and William Galston, a former adviser to President Bill Clinton, have endorsed raising the retirement age to 67. President Obama, during his 2011 discussions with congressional leaders on the debt ceiling, also agreed to raise the age of eligibility to 67.[23] It is unclear whether the White House would support such a change today.

In keeping with the goal of comprehensive Medicare reform, Congress should take three initial steps:

Raise the standard age of eligibility for both Medicare and Social Security to 68 over the course of 10 years, and thereafter index the eligibility age to longevity.[24] The Heritage Foundation’s Center for Data Analysis estimates that raising the Medicare eligibility age to 68 at the rate of two months per year beginning in 2012 would save $52.8 billion over five years and $243.6 billion over 10 years.[25]Repeal the 10 percent penalty for late enrollment in Medicare Part B for seniors who remain in employment-sponsored health plans and thus reduce Medicare costs.[26] Provide tax relief for those who work beyond the standard retirement age. For example, under the Heritage Saving the American Dream proposal, any person, regardless of income, who works beyond the standard retirement age would automatically qualify for an annual $10,000 tax deduction.[27]

The best policy for coping with the retirement of the massive baby boom generation is structural Medicare reform based on a defined-contribution (“premium support”) program of financing. The Heritage Foundation has developed the components of such a reform in detail.[28]

Under such a reform, which would build upon the experience of Medicare Part D and the success of the popular Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP), government payment to competing health plans (including traditional Medicare) would be calculated based on market-based bids to provide Medicare benefits, and beneficiaries would choose the plan that best meets their personal needs. Intense market competition among plans and providers, driven by personal choice, will not only secure better value for Medicare dollars, but will also reduce the growth in Medicare spending.

Robert E. Moffit, PhD, is Senior Fellow in the Center for Policy Innovation at The Heritage Foundation. Alyene Senger is a Research Assistant in the Center for Health Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.

[1] Douglas W. Elmendorf, Director, Congressional Budget Office, letter to Speaker John Boehner, U.S. House of Representatives, July 24, 2012, p. 13, http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/43471-hr6079.pdf (accessed March 6, 2013).

[2] Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, 2012 Annual Report of the Boards of Trustees of the Federal Hospital Insurance and Federal Supplementary Medical Insurance Trust Funds, April 23, 2012, p. 209, http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Statistics-Trends-and-Reports/ReportsTrustFunds/Downloads/TR2012.pdf (accessed March 6, 2013).

[3] Ibid., p. 25.

[4] Ibid., p. 5.

[5] Congressional Budget Office, The 2012 Long-Term Budget Outlook, June 2012, p. 14, http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/06-05-Long-Term_Budget_Outlook_2.pdf (accessed March 6, 2013). (Emphasis Added.)

[6] Ibid., p. 15.

[7] 2012 Medicare Trustees Report, p. 27.

[8] Suzanne Codespote, “Medicare Unfunded Obligations for 2012 Trustees Report,” Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Office of the Actuary, letter to the Senate Budget Committee, April 23, 2012. The long-term actuarial window for the Medicare Trustees is 75 years.

[9] Jill Quadagno and Joseph Quinn, “Does Social Security Discourage Work?” in Eric R. Kingson and James H. Schulz, Social Security in the 21st Century (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), p. 138.

[10] Ibid.

[11] Ibid., p. 135.

[12] U.S. Census Bureau, “Births, Deaths, Marriages, & Divorces: Life Expectancy,” The 2012 Statistical Abstract, http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/cats/births_deaths_marriages_divorces/life_expectancy.html (accessed March 6, 20134), and U.S. Census Bureau, “2012 National Population Projections: Summary Tables,” Table 10, http://www.census.gov/population/projections/data/national/2012/summarytables.html (accessed March 6, 2013). See also Richard Thomas, “Eldercare: The Challenge of the Twenty First Century,” Harvard Generations Policy Journal, Vol. 1 (Winter 2004), p. 39.

[13] Denis Cortese, Natalie Landman, and Robert K. Smoldt, “A Roadmap to Medicare Sustainability,” a joint paper prepared by scholars from Arizona State University and the Health Transformation Institute, February 2013, p. 83.

[14] Peter J. Ferrara and Michael Tanner, A New Deal for Social Security (Washington, DC: The Cato Institute, 1998), p. 40.

[15] Ibid.

[16] Daniela Yu and Jim Harter, “In U.S., Engaged Employees Exercise More, Eat Healthier,” January 16, 2003, http://www.gallup.com/poll/159845/engaged-employees-exercise-east-healthier.aspx (accessed March 6, 2013), and “Are We Happy Yet?” Pew Research Social and Demographic Trends, February 13, 2006, http://pewsocialtrends.org/2006/02/13/are-we-happy-yet (accessed January 22, 2013).

[17] Joyce Manchester, “ How Will Older Peoples’ Participation in the Labor Force be Affected by the Coming Increase in the Full Retirement Age for Social Security?” Congressional Budget Office blog, January 9, 2013, http://www.cbo.gov/publication/43834 (accessed March 6, 2013).

[18] Cortese et al., “A Roadmap to Medicare Sustainability,” p. 88.

[19] Congressional Budget Office, “Raising the Ages of Eligibility for Medicare and Social Security,” Issue Brief, January 2012, p. 6, http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/01-10-2012-Medicare_SS_EligibilityAgesBrief.pdf (accessed March 6, 2013). This estimate was based on the change being in effect in 2014.

[20] The Business Roundtable, “Social Security Reform and Medicare Modernization Proposals,” January 2013, p. 3.

[21] Susan Jaffe, “Medicare Eligibility Age Should Go Up, Hospitals Say,” Politico, September 8, 2011, http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0911/63020.html#ixzz2MxbfzuDc (accessed March 11, 2013).

[22] News release, “Hatch Outlines Structural Medicare, Medicaid Reforms that Should Be Part of Deficit Reduction Package,” Senator Orrin Hatch, January 24, 2013, http://www.hatch.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/releases?ID=7fa4c651-1d83-48ef-b3c4-5b23215be2f5 (accessed March 6, 2013).

[23] Janet Adamy, “Debt Deal May Hit Medicare,” The Wall Street Journal, August 2, 2011. However, the President did not include the recommendation to raise the age of eligibility in his September 2011 deficit reduction proposal.

[24] Stuart M. Butler et al., Saving the American Dream: The Heritage Plan to Fix the Debt, Cut Spending, and Restore Prosperity, The Heritage Foundation, 2011, p. 14, http://savingthedream.org/. Under the Heritage proposal, the eligibility age for the early retirement option for Social Security would thus be raised from 62 to 65.

[25] For the Center for Data Analysis methodology, see Appendix B of Robert E. Moffit, “The First Stage of Medicare Reform: Fixing the Current Program,” Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 2611, October 17, 2011, http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2011/10/the-first-stage-of-medicare-reform-fixing-the-current-program. This estimate was based on the change being effective in 2012.

[26] Walton Francis, “Using the Federal Employees’ Model: Nine Tests for Rational Medicare Reform,” Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 1675, August 7, 2003, http://www.heritage.org/Research/Reports/2003/08/Using-the-Federal-Employees-Model-Nine-Tests-for-Rational-Medicare-Reform. See also Walton J. Francis, Putting Medicare Consumers in Charge: Lessons from The FEHBP (Washington: AEI Press, 2009), pp. 98–99.

[27] Butler et al., Saving the American Dream, p. 14.

[28] Robert E. Moffit, “The Second Stage of Medicare Reform: Moving to a Premium Support Program,” Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 2626, November 28, 2011, http://report.heritage.org/bg2626.


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Paul Ryan Learns Nothing from Historic Gender Gap: Budget Guts Women’s Health Programs

Our guest blogger is Lindsay Rosenthal, a Research Assistant for Health Policy and Women’s Health and Rights at the Center for American Progress.

The 20 point gender gap in the 2012 election was the largest since Gallup poll began tracking in 1952 — the Obama-Biden ticket beat the Romney-Ryan ticket by a large margin with women, driven largely by women of color turning out at high rates for the President.

That loss was predictable based on polling that asked women questions about specific proposals in Paul Ryan’s previous budgets, which showed that women highly disapprove of cutting Medicaid, Medicare, and other vital programs that meet their health care needs. But the budget Ryan released this week suggests he learned nothing from women’s responses at the voting booth.

Ryan has never been a friend to women’s health, and has repeatedly taken action to limit women’s rights and access to health care — and his new budget is just more of the same. It would dismantle the advancements made through the Affordable Care Act and institute dramatic reductions in the services available through key programs, on top of the cuts women’s health services are already facing as a result of the sequester.

Here are the top four ways the new Ryan Budget (which is just the same as the old Ryan budget) guts key programs for women’s health:

Millions of women would lose the consumer protections and access to affordable health coverage that they gained under the health law. These reforms are critical for both women’s health and economic security.

The Ryan budget would eliminate the ban on discrimination against those with preexisting conditions, including breast cancer, Cesarean sections, rape, and health needs related to domestic violence; provisions that allow young women to stay on their parents health insurance plans until age 26; premium tax credits that help individuals and small businesses purchase health insurance; Obamacare’s expansion of Medicaid; and a slew of other benefits that the law provides for women’s health.

By repealing protections in Obamacare, the Ryan budget would preserve an individual health insurance market that routinely discriminates against women. Insurance companies in the individual market charge women $1 billion more in premiums than men each year for the same set of benefits. Under the health reform law, insurers will also be required to cover maternity care — only 12 percent of plans on the individual market currently do.

Women are 70 percent of adult Medicaid beneficiaries. In fact, more than one in ten non-elderly women receive their health insurance coverage through Medicaid.

But the Ryan budget would replace guaranteed federal funding for Medicaid with block grants to states — fixed sums of money set in advance, regardless of actual costs. By 2023, the Ryan budget would reduce federal Medicaid spending by 810 billion, forcing states to cut back on coverage and benefits. And by repealing Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion, the Ryan budget would deny Medicaid coverage to at least 7 million women who are expected to become newly eligible for the program if the law is fully implemented, leaving them with nowhere to turn for coverage.

Women represent over half of Medicare beneficiaries and 62 percent of those over the age of 80.

The Ryan budget would move toward a privatization of Medicare, proposing that those currently in the health program get vouchers for private insurance. Under the Ryan plan, the first seniors hit by these changes could pay up to $59,500 more during retirement, with those who will be Medicare eligible in 2050 paying up to $331,200 more.

Women on Medicare generally earn less in social security benefits than their male counterparts and have higher out-of pocket-medical costs. Paul Ryan’s plan to privatize Medicare threatens both the health and economic security of elderly women.

By repealing Obamacare and gutting Medicaid, the Ryan budget would severely undermine access to reproductive health care, especially contraception, for millions of women.

47 million women are projected to benefit from the no-cost preventive services that have already gone into effect, including mammograms, Pap smears, well-baby care, contraception, preconception and prenatal care in well-woman visits, gestational diabetes screening, lactation supports, and much more. In addition, the Medicaid program provides 75 percent of public funding for family-planning services and is expected to play an even greater role in providing access to family planning once the ACA is fully implemented.

Women of reproductive age spend 68 percent more on their health care expenses than men and their reproductive health care and the expense of birth control is a significant part of that spending. Surveys show that nearly one in four women with household incomes of less than $75,000 have put off a doctor’s visit for birth control to save money. More than half of young adult women say they have not used their prescribed contraceptive method as directed because it was cost-prohibitive.


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Ahead of the Bell: Spectrum shares continue slide

Shares of Spectrum Pharmaceuticals Inc. plunged in premarket trading Wednesday after the pharmaceutical company said sales of its drug Fusilev could fall significantly this year.

The Henderson, Nev., company's stock started to slide Tuesday after it said it expects Fusilev revenue to total between $10 million and $15 million in the first quarter and about $80 million to $90 million for the year.

The estimate for the year would represent a drop of at least 56 percent from Fusilev's 2012 total of $204.3 million, and it is much less than analysts expected.

Fusilev is an injectable treatment for the side effects of a chemotherapy drug called methotrexate.

Roth Capital Partners analyst Joseph Pantginis said Spectrum's announcement shocked Wall Street, and he believes investor confidence in the company will be shaky until its new sales push show results. He had expected Fusilev revenue of $47.2 million in the first quarter and $210 million for 2013.

"We are certainly disappointed by this news and unfortunately we believe that this sends a poor signal to the Street, which has been hanging on everything Fusilev," Pantginis wrote in a Wednesday morning research note.

Pantginis said that while the Fusilev announcement will hurt Spectrum's stock, he still sees value when looking at the company's total revenue stream.

Company shares had climbed 4 percent to close at $12.43 on Tuesday. That put the stock up 11 percent so far in 2013 before shares began sliding after hours.

By Wednesday morning before markets opened, the stock was down about 40 percent, or $4.93, to $7.50. If that price carries over into regular market trading, it would be its lowest price since 2011.


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Rush Limbaugh

(Difference between revisions)Rush Limbaugh's show is advertiser supported, which creates a financial incentive for him not to say what needs to be said, and not to stand up for the [[Bible]] in a meaningful manner.Rush Limbaugh's show is advertiser supported, which creates a financial incentive for him not to say what needs to be said, and not to stand up for the [[Bible]] in a meaningful manner.Rush is incredibly [[Obesity|fat]], and legend has it that on the right summer nights, you can smell Rush Limbauwoe's farts from the gates of his mountaintop fortress. Rush is large and in charge. He is currently eating. == Media bullying of Todd Akin ==== Media bullying of Todd Akin ==RushLimbaugh 1.jpg

Rush Limbaugh (born January 12, 1951) is an American radio talk show host popular with an older, largely male, audience. The typical listener to Rush Limbaugh and conservative talk radio is a 67-year-old male. Married and divorced three times -- and now married for the fourth time -- Limbaugh participated in the media bullying of Todd Akin in August 2012, along with other RINO Backers.[1][2]

Rush Limbaugh's show is advertiser supported, which creates a financial incentive for him not to say what needs to be said, and not to stand up for the Bible in a meaningful manner.

Rush is incredibly fat, and legend has it that on the right summer nights, you can smell Rush Limbauwoe's farts from the gates of his mountaintop fortress. Rush is large and in charge. He is currently eating.

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Congressman Todd Akin is the Republican Party nominee for one of the most-watched races for the U.S. Senate in 2012. He has represented a portion of the greater St. Louis, Missouri area in the House of Representatives since 2000 (Missouri's 2nd congressional district).

On August 19, 2012, in a local television interview with KTVI, Akin rejected a suggestion that there should be a broad rape exception to limits on abortion. He distinguished between an actual rape and a false allegation of rape by referring to the former as a "legitimate rape," terminology that the liberal media then unfairly took out of context to engage in demagoguery against him.

Perhaps fearful of losing an advertiser, even though he's already made millions by pretending to be conservative, Limbaugh piled on with the media bullying against Akin. He called Akin's comment "stupid" and then, illustrating his foolish self-centeredness, declared that "If I had demanded Akin drop out, he’d be gone."[3] Limbaugh added, "What I think Mr. Akin should try to realize here as he makes his decision is that all of these things that he truly cares about will be much easier to make happen if we win the Senate and the White House and hold the House this November. He must put the nation and its future ahead of everything else that he's considering. And I hope he comes to the right conclusion."[4]

True conservatives stood with principle and defended Akin's remarks, and his right to remain in the race.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]

Rush Hudson Limbaugh III was born in 1951 in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. At age 16, he chose to explore his passion for broadcasting by working as a disc jockey, hosting a radio show in his hometown. After four years, he left for Pittsburgh to work for the former ABC owned and operated KQV. Following his work as a disc jockey, Rush briefly left broadcasting for business, joining the Kansas City Royals as Director of Group Sales, and then Director of Sales and Special Events. In 1983, he re-entered radio as a political commentator for KMBZ in Kansas City. A year later, in 1984, Rush dropped out of college after his freshman year to pursue work full-time as a disk jockey, when KFBK in Sacramento, California hired him to host a talk show that reveled in controversy about conservative politics. Limbaugh tripled the program's ratings in four years. From there, in 1988 he went on to New York where the record-breaking national show, the EIB Network, was born.

On August 1, 1988, Rush launched his phenomenally successful radio broadcast into national syndication, with 56 radio stations. More than 20 years later the show is heard on nearly 600 stations by up to 20 million people each week and is the highest-rated national radio talk show in America. Rush was awarded the "Syndicated Radio Personality" of the year by the National Association of Broadcasters in 1992, 1995, 2000, and 2005. He was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 1993 and National Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame in 1998. Rush Limbaugh has been labeled as the savior of AM radio by broadcast industry leaders, sometimes called the "Doctor of Democracy."[14]

Limbaugh hosts a radio show famed for its incisive criticism of the follies of liberalism. He is often the target of liberal's ad hominem attacks, such as Democrat Sen. Al Franken, who wrote a book entitled "Rush Limbaugh Is a Big Fat Idiot". Limbaugh generically refers to feminists who advocate abortion as feminazis and to his own self as having "talent on loan from God". Sensitive about his own schooling, he ridicules the college educated as the "Arts & Croissant Crowd."

Limbaugh's conservative talk show is nationally syndicated and averages over 16-20 million listeners weekly, making him the #1 radio talk show host in America [15] for three decades. In July 2008, Rush announced "he has renewed his contract with Premiere Radio Networks and Clear Channel Radio, continuing syndication of his show 'many years into the future.'" [16]

Limbaugh's fans enjoy his bluster and bombast, but behind it there is a substantive defense of a coherent political philosophy. He makes politics engaging and entertaining, producing an audience more eager to seek out other sources of information. Limbaugh "dittoheads" consume more print news than do non-listeners. Like Fox News viewers, Limbaugh fans are more likely to tune in to presidential debates. Far from making people cynical or indifferent toward public affairs, Limbaugh reinforces his audience's disposition to participate in the political process.[17]

Conservative Republicans are in his audience, but educational attainment, family income, and race do not predict who listens. Listening to Limbaugh is significantly correlated with public affairs information. He is not merely an entertainer and people who listen to him regularly are very well informed on public affairs. However, his radio audience is smaller than the TV audiences of conservative commentators Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity.[18]

Newsweek editor Evan Thomas said on MSNBC's "Hardball" that Obama was "sort of God."

Asking rhetorically what God has in common with Obama, Limbaugh said, "Neither has a birth certificate." [19] He went on to say "God does not think he's Obama," and "Liberals love Obama." Limbaugh explained more differences, "Another difference is that God only demands to be worshiped once a week," and "God asks for only 10 percent of your money", and "God gives you freedom to live your life as you choose."

Limbaugh made national headlines when he was asked to write 400 words for a newspaper column about Obama's plans. He said he didn't need 400 words, he needed just four: "I hope he fails." He was immediately attacked by the Obama White House and liberal pundits as an unpatriotic obstructionist. Limbaugh expounded his view in the show's transcript; if Obama is for socialist policies and against capitalist policies, of course Limbaugh could not support those policies, and hoped he would fail. [20]

Limbaugh addressed CPAC and further discussed his stance that generated so much attention. [21]

"Did the Democrats want the war in Iraq to fail? Well, they certainly did. And they not only wanted the war in Iraq to fail, they proclaimed it a failure. ... The last thing they wanted was to win. They hoped George Bush failed. So where is it -- what is so strange about being honest and saying, I want Barack Obama to fail if his mission is to restructure and reform this country so that capitalism and individual liberty are not its foundation? Why would I want that to succeed?"

Former Republican National Chairman Michael Steele called Limbaugh an "entertainer" whose comments were "incendiary" and "ugly," and Limbaugh counterattacked Steele's fitness to run the party. A Gallup poll in May 2009 on who was the main voice of the GOP found Limbaugh leading the pack at 13%, with Steele trailing at 1%.

During the early years of his radio show, Limbaugh also had a syndicated, self-titled half-hour television show patterned along the lines of his radio show. Rush Limbaugh ran from 1992 to 1996. [22]

The Limbaugh Letter is a monthly publication that contains conservative articles and humor in Rush's style.

Limbaugh is involved in the conservative satire show The 1/2 Hour News Hour show on the Fox News Channel. [23]

Rush occasionally writes op-ed pieces for the Wall Street Journal.

Limbaugh endorsed Mitt Romney for the 2008 Presidential Election. [24] He was often critical of John McCain during the Republican primaries, but supported him in the general election.

Limbaugh has warned against false prophets, telling his audience in 1996 that, "You are being manipulated in a way that I find very bothersome." "Pat Buchanan is not a conservative. He's a populist."[25].

On October 2, 2007, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid wrote a letter to Mark P. Mays, President and CEO of Clear Channel Communications, who is Limbaugh's chief patron. In it Senator Reid essentially demanded that Mays order Limbaugh to apologize for remarks he made concerning "phony soldiers."[26] A phony soldier is someone who is not a soldier at all but is pretending to be one, especially in a public forum. Such activity is unlawful, and the faker whose activity prompted Limbaugh's attacks has since been convicted and punished.[27] This letter was co-signed by nearly all Democratic senators. In a speech in Philadelphia on October 11th, Limbaugh announced plans to sell the original letter on eBay in a charity auction. The proceeds went to the Marine Corps Law Enforcement Foundation. The letter sold for $2.1 million and Limbaugh matched the winning amount with a total of $4.2 million being donated. [28]

On October 6, 2003 Limbaugh told his audience he was addicted to OxyContin and other painkillers citing a failed back surgery as the cause of his pain and subsequent dependence. [29][30] Limbaugh underwent treatment for his addiction, and charges against him for alleged "doctor shopping" to procure prescription medications were dropped[31] after Democratic prosecutors illegally seized private medical records[32] in a blatant misuse of the criminal justice system to discredit Limbaugh.

In March of 2012, Sandra Fluke, a 30-year-old former Georgetown law student, gave testimony in support of an Obama directive to have private healthcare cover contraception. Fluke chose Georgetown's law school despite knowing that its healthcare plan does not cover contraception,[33] but she then complained that contraception was expensive and that Georgetown's student health insurance should cover the cost. Limbaugh responded to her comments on his show where he said that her insurance paying for her to have sex made her a "slut" and a "prostitute."[34] He later went on to say that he would agree to the payment if she would film herself having sex and put the video online. After several days of backlash, which included condemnations from both parties and advertisers backing out, Limbaugh apologized, saying he "did not mean a personal attack" on Fluke and had used poor word choice but reiterated his opposition to her comments.[35][36]

Limbaugh is an avid sports fan, particularly football. He briefly held a position as a commentator on ESPN's Sunday NFL Countdown pre-game show. He resigned from the show on October 2, 2006 after comments made regarding Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb received widespread criticism.

"I think what we've had here is a little social concern in the NFL. The media has been very desirous that a black quarterback do well. There is a little hope invested in McNabb, and he got a lot of credit for the performance of this team that he didn't deserve. The defense carried this team."

After McNabb's response, "It's sad that you've got to go to skin color. I thought we were through with that whole deal," significant pressure was put upon Limbaugh to resign. [37]

The following is a list of other facts about Rush Limbaugh:[14]

Honorary Member of the Republican Freshman Class 1995 House of Representatives. Time Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in the world (2009). Forbes Magazine 50 Most Powerful Celebrities in the United States, numerous years (#19 in 2010). Barbara Walters’ 10 Most Fascinating People (2008). The Giving Back Fund’s 10 Most Generous Celebrities for contributions to charities and individuals, such as the Marine Corps - Law Enforcement Foundation. Raised 20 Million Dollars for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society since 1989. Each year Rush hosts a Radiothon (one three-hour broadcast per year) during his program to raise funds for Leukemia and Lymphoma research. Author of The Limbaugh Letter, the most widely read political newsletter in the country and two best-selling books, The Way Things Ought to Be (ISBN 067175145x) and See, I Told You So (ISBN 067187120X), which have sold over 8.9 million copies, including an American publishing record for See, I Told You So. Guest Television appearances include Nightline with Ted Koppel, Cross Fire, Good Morning America, CBS This Morning, The Today Show, The Phil Donahue Show, The Late Show with David Letterman, The Tonight Show, This Week with David Brinkley, Meet the Press with Tim Russert, and The Drew Carey Show. Rush also starred as himself in the popular network sitcoms Family Guy and Hearts Afire. Profiled on CBS's 60 Minutes, ABC's 20/20 and in numerous publications including U.S. News and World Report, Newsweek, National Review, Time Magazine, The New York Times Magazine and USA Weekend. Miss America Pageant judge (2010). "You know why there's a Second Amendment? In case the government fails to follow the first one." - Rush Limbaugh, 17 Aug 1993

Like Mark Levin and others, Rush Limbaugh holds a lexicon for many liberals and Democrats, although Rush's lexicon is less expansive as Mark Levin's

? http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0812/80003.html#ixzz253Tv1IjT? http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/2012/08/21/akin_s_remark_was_stupid_and_untrue_now_he_must_put_the_nation_s_future_first? http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0812/80003.html#ixzz253Tv1IjT? http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/2012/08/21/akin_s_remark_was_stupid_and_untrue_now_he_must_put_the_nation_s_future_first? http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=004DDFAC-6907-452E-93F5-62D3793BBABE? http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/election-2012/wp/2012/08/21/tony-perkins-gop-treatment-of-akin-suspect/? http://www.rollcall.com/news/missouri_delegates_still_support_todd_akin_despite_controversy-217050-1.html? http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57497428-503544/rep-steve-king-backs-up-todd-akin-weighs-in-on-rape-and-abortion/? Rand Paul reticent to weigh in on Akin's future but says Akin's comment was incorrect by Ryan Alessi, mycn2.com, August 22, 2012, retrieved August 24, 2012? http://akin.org/huckabee-chip-in? http://hinterlandgazette.com/2012/08/social-conservatives-including-frc-head-tony-perkins-defending-rep-todd-akins-legitimate-rape-comment.html? http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0812/80049.html? http://buchanan.org/blog/a-grand-old-party-in-panic-2-5223? 14.0 14.1 Rush Limbaugh, the "Doctor of Democracy", TwoIfByTea.com.? The Top Talk Radio Audiences Talkers magazine online? Rush Renews Contract, Human Events, July, 2, 2008? Jamieson and Cappella (2008) ? Stephen Earl Bennett, " Who Listens to Rush Limbaugh's Radio Program and the Relationship Between Listening to Limbaugh and Knowledge of Public Affairs, 1994-2006," Journal of Radio & Audio Media, May 2009, Vol. 16 Issue 1, p66-82, in EBSCO? Rush Limbaugh pummels Obama on birth certificate WND, June 10, 2009? Limbaugh radio show transcript.? Limbaugh the Leader? Obama Chief of Staff Fox News, March 01, 2009? Rush Limbaugh (TV series) at the Internet Movie Database? Fox News Channel's '1/2 Hour News Hour': Right Funny, in Spots washingtonpost.com? Limbaugh Endorses Romney, Melanie Hunter, CNSNews, February 05, 2008? See Robin Toner, "Radio Talk Show Host Fears For True Conservatism's Fate," New York Times Feb. 23, 1996? Reid, Harry, et al. "Letter to Mark P. Mays of Clear Channel Communications." Electronic Office of US Senator Harry Reid, October 2, 2007. Retrieved October 19, 2007.? Limbaugh, Rush. "The Anatomy of a Smear: 'Phony Soldiers' Is a Phony Story." Rush Limbaugh Official Site, accessed December 25, 2007.? http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/420889/harry_reidrush_limbaugh_letter_nets.html? The Rush Limbaugh Show, October 6, 2007.? [http://www.cnn.com/2003/SHOWBIZ/10/10/rush.limbaugh/ "Limbaugh admits addiction to pain medication"? http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/04/28/national/main1561324.shtml? http://archive.newsmax.com/hottopics/Rush_Limbaugh.shtml ? Holt, Mytheos. "Sandra Fluke: A Fake Victim of Georgetown's Policy on Contraceptives?" March 3, 2012. The Blaze. http://www.theblaze.com/stories/sandra-fluke-a-fake-victim-of-georgetowns-policy-on-contraceptives/? http://www.latimes.com/news/nation/nationnow/la-na-nn-limbaugh-apology-20120303,0,6854957.story Rush Limbaugh apologizes for 'slut' remarks aimed at Sandra Fluke? http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2109876/Rush-Limbaugh-apologises-calling-student-Sandra-Fluke-slut.html 'I sincerely apologise': Rush Limbaugh says sorry for calling student a 'slut' in row over birth control which led advertisers to boycott show? http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Elections/Vox-News/2012/0303/What-Rush-Limbaugh-actually-apologized What?? Rush Limbaugh actually apologized!!? http://espn.go.com/gen/news/2003/1001/1628537.htmlGordon, Scott. Rush Limbaugh: An Oral & Media Biography (2009). 258pp quotes and comments by his friends and enemies. Jamieson, Kathleen Hall, and Joseph N. Cappella. Echo Chamber: Rush Limbaugh and the Conservative Media Establishment (2008) balanced analysis by scholars; compares Limbaugh with Fox and Wall Street Journal excerpt and text search

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McConnell: GOP Will Likely Take Debt Ceiling Hostage For Spending Cuts — Again

Republicans and Democrats agreed to increase the debt ceiling for three months at the end of January, but with another deadline approaching in May, the top Senate Republican is hinting that the GOP will again demand spending cuts in exchange for any increase.

That is par for the course for Republicans, who have repeatedly threatened to let the nation default on its obligations if President Obama and Senate Democrats don’t agree to cut spending, but this time, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said the GOP will likely demand cuts to America’s entitlement programs — Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security — to agree to an increase in the borrowing limit, The Hill reports:

“Until we make our entitlement programs fit the demographics of our country, you can’t save America, you can’t save the healthcare system,” McConnell said. “There is no revenue solution, I would say to you.”

“We all anticipate that the president’s request of us to raise the debt ceiling, which we’ll probably do sometime this will generate another, hopefully, another discussion about solving the real problem,” he said.

Republicans continue to crow about entitlement reform, ignoring that Social Security is fully solvent for at least two decades, that Obama extended Medicare’s solvency by nine years as part of his sweeping healthcare law, and that at least one of the major reforms Republicans favor — raising the retirement age for Medicare enrollees — would do nothing to improve the program’s health. Meanwhile, the GOP refuses to actually put forth specific entitlement reform plans that would do anything other than end the programs as they exist today.

Using the debt ceiling to extract such cuts is an even less reasonable position, given the pain the GOP’s debt intransigence has already inflicted on the economy. The 2011 debt fight led to increased borrowing costs, hampered job growth for months, and created the automatic budget cuts that went into effect at the beginning of March — all of which burdened an economy that is still struggling to fully recover from the Great Recession. That brinksmanship has led leading policymakers like Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, as well as a vast majority of economists, to call for the abolition of the statutory debt limit.


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Obamacare’s Essential Benefits Regulation Creates Disparities Among States

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has issued final rules for Obamacare’s essential health benefits (EHB) package, setting up yet another new source of conflict over Obamacare, this time among the states.[1]

HHS has adopted a “state benchmark plan” approach for setting the EHB package. The result of this decision is that the EHB package will now vary from state to state. While Administration officials tout this approach as offering less market disruption and more flexibility, it will also have the effect that some states will receive more in Obamacare subsidies than others.

This is because, in trying to implement one part of Obamacare, the Administration is tripping over another part of the law.

More State Benefit Mandates Equal More Federal Subsidies

Beginning in 2014, Obamacare requires all non-grandfathered health insurance plans in the individual and small group markets to cover the EHB package. The law also says that if a state imposes benefit mandates beyond those required by the federal EHB package, then the state must pay the extra cost for subsidizing those extra benefits in the exchange.

However, the HHS regulations implementing the EHB package specify that, at least for the first two years, the EHB package in each state will be determined by a benchmark plan, which for most states will be their largest small group plan.[2] Since those benchmark plans already exist and they already cover state-mandated benefits, those state benefit mandates will now be part of the “essential benefits” that insurers will have to cover. That, in turn, means that when insurers offer their policies in the exchanges, the cost of those state benefit mandates will be paid for with federal subsidies.

Of course, this design gives every state an incentive to add more benefit mandates, knowing that federal taxpayers will be picking up most of the tab. To prevent that, HHS drew a line in the EHB regulation that essentially “grandfathers” all state benefit mandates enacted before December 31, 2011. That means states will pay the additional cost only for any state benefit mandates enacted after 2011.

The effect will be disparities among states, as the package of “essential” benefits will be more generous in some states than in others. Of course, those differences will also be reflected in plan premiums.

Yet the amount paid by those receiving Obamacare’s exchange subsidies will not vary by state—despite individuals in one state receiving more generous (and more costly) coverage than individuals in another state. The reason is that the Obamacare subsidies are based on the recipient’s income, not the cost of the available coverage.[3]

The way the Obamacare exchange subsidies work is that the recipient pays no more than a specified percentage of income for coverage, with the rest of the premium picked up by federal taxpayers. The subsidies are tied to the second-lowest-cost silver plan (the reference plan) in the state’s exchange and will be set on a sliding scale.

For example, a couple at 250 percent of the federal poverty level (annual income of $37,825) will pay no more than 8.05 percent of their income—$2,383 (or $198 a month)—in premiums for the reference plan. That will hold true regardless of whether they live in a state where the premium for the reference plan is $10,000, one where it is $15,000, or one where it is $20,000.

Thus, in a state with a more generous—and therefore more expensive—EHB package, there will be a greater federal subsidization of premiums by Obamacare, creating inequalities among states. While it is true that in many cases the differences may be modest, those differences could be significant in cases where states require coverage for expensive treatments.

For example, the EHB package will require coverage for autism spectrum disorders in 24 states and for “applied behavior analysis based therapies” for autism spectrum disorders in another four states. However, in the remaining 22 states, those services will not be part of the required essential benefits. Similarly, the required essential benefit coverage will include bariatric surgery in four states, bone marrow transplant in five states, chiropractic care in 10 states, infertility treatments in nine states, and private-duty nursing in two states.[4]

EHB Controversy Exacerbated

Beyond cost, some of these benefit mandates are controversial for other reasons as well. For example, there are questions about the long-term value of bariatric surgery for obesity, particularly relative to patient risks. In the case of autism and related conditions, given that treatments consist principally of educational and behavioral therapies, it can reasonably be argued that they should be funded through social service programs rather than through acute care health insurance. In the case of infertility treatments, many individuals consider some of the procedures used to be immoral and thus strongly object to being forced to subsidize them through their health insurance.

Yet the Administration’s EHB regulation now effectively deems these and other controversial treatments to be “essential”—but only in those states that previously mandated them. Furthermore, the Administration’s approach exacerbates existing mandated benefit controversies by introducing the new dynamic of federal funding discrimination derived from a policy that freezes in place prior disparities among the states.

To understand how that could spark new conflicts over Obamacare, consider the example of infertility treatments. Infertility treatments will be part of the required essential benefit coverage in Illinois but not in any of the adjoining states of Indiana, Wisconsin, Iowa, Missouri, or Kentucky. If lawmakers in one or more of those adjoining states were to now mandate coverage for infertility treatment, their state’s taxpayers would have to cover the extra cost of the exchange subsidies. Yet in Illinois federal taxpayers will pick up the extra subsidy cost.

More Obamacare Consequences

Thus, the effect of this policy is to reward states that previously enacted excessive benefit mandates (driving up the cost of health insurance) while penalizing states that took a more restrained approach in the past (keeping health insurance more affordable).

It also means that if a hypothetical couple in the above example lives in one of the five states adjoining Illinois and wants coverage for infertility treatments, they can get it with federal subsidies by moving across the state line to Illinois.

Of course, HHS could eliminate these disparities by crafting a single national EHB package—which is what the architects of Obamacare intended and expected. Yet doing that would shift special interest lobbying over benefits from state capitals to Washington while also exacerbating other problems with Obamacare.

For example, Obamacare’s insurance rating rules will increase premiums. Yet a national EHB package would raise premiums even more in states that currently have fewer benefit mandates. Also, Obamacare’s “public utility” approach to regulating insurers will drive industry consolidation, resulting over time in fewer and larger health insurers.[5] A national EHB package would reinforce and accelerate that trend by further limiting the ability of insurers to differentiate themselves from their competitors.

Contrasting the coverage of prescription drugs in the Federal Employee Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) versus in Medicare illustrates why letting insurers design benefit packages in response to consumer demand and innovations in medical treatment is preferable to government benefit setting.

Since its inception in 1960, the FEHBP has been a very competitive market, with participating insurers allowed wide latitude in designing their benefit packages. Over time, prescription drug coverage in FEHBP plans became widespread and increasingly sophisticated in response to consumer demands and a changing pharmaceutical market. In contrast, adding drug coverage to Medicare literally took an act of Congress and occurred only in 2003.

Fundamental Error

Believing that politicians and bureaucrats will make better decisions than individuals and business is a fundamental error underlying the essential benefits and numerous other provisions in Obamacare.

There is simply no good solution to these problems short of Congress reversing its policy mistake of granting HHS benefit-setting authority. The better policy is to let consumer demand in a competitive market drive insurance benefit design.

Edmund F. Haislmaier is Senior Research Fellow and Alyene Senger is Research Assistant in the Center for Health Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.


[2]Forty-one states and the District of Columbia plan to use their largest small group plan as the benchmark. See Appendix A of the final rule for the complete list.

[3]Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010, Public Law 111–148, and Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, Public Law 111–152, Sec. 1401.

[4]Each state’s EHB benchmark plan and list of benefits can be found here: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight, “Additional Information on Essential Health Benefits Benchmark Plans,” http://cciio.cms.gov/resources/data/ehb.html (accessed April 2, 2013).


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Peregrine Pharma reports smaller 3Q loss

TUSTIN, Calif. -- Drug developer Peregrine Pharmaceuticals Inc. said Tuesday it took a smaller loss in the fiscal third quarter as it received more revenue and spent less on clinical trials.

Peregrine said its revenue more than doubled and its research and development costs fell by about 40 percent. The company does not have any approved products. Its most advanced drug candidate is bavituximab, a potential treatment for non-small cell lung cancer.

The company lost $4.9 million, or 4 cents per share, over the three months ended Jan. 31. A year earlier it took a loss of $11.1 million, or 13 cents per share. Revenue grew to $7 million from $3.3 million over the three months ended Jan. 31.

Analysts forecast a loss of 7 cents per share on $4.1 million in revenue, according to FactSet.

In September Peregrine said patients who were treated with bavituximab lived twice as long as patients who received only chemotherapy in a clinical trial, and its shares rose to a three-year high. In February the company revised its report, saying the bavituximab patients lived only 60 percent longer. Peregrine said the problem appeared to be tied to another company that was contracted to code and distribute the product.

The company is preparing to meet with Food and Drug Administration and hopes to begin a late-stage trial of bavituximab by year-end.

Shares of Peregrine Pharmaceuticals fell 4 cents to $1.58 Tuesday. In after-hours trading the shares gained 5 percent, or 8 cents, to $1.66.


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Navigating the ObamaCare Maze

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