Title: Health Policy to Legislation
1Health Policy to Legislation
- Robert G. Frank
- Lecture 2
- Health Services, Research, Management and Policy
- 6152
2Who is this man?
3Who is this lady?
4Who is this man?
5Sonny Hoyer Majority Leader of the House of
Representatives
- Congressman Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland's Fifth
Congressional District was elected in November
2006 to serve as House Majority Leader in the
110th Congress by his colleagues in the
Democratic Caucus, after serving as the
Democratic Whip in the previous two Congresses. - As the Majority Leader, Congressman Hoyer is
charged with scheduling legislation for
consideration on the House Floor, as well as
building unity among House Democrats and
delivering the Democratic Party's message. - Now serving his 14th term in Congress, he also is
the longest-serving Member of the U.S. House of
Representatives from Southern Maryland in
history. - Prior to serving as the Whip in the 108th and
109th Congresses, he served as Chair of the
Democratic Caucus B the fourth-ranking position
among House Democrats B from 1989 to 1995. He is
the former Co-Chair (and a current member) of the
Democratic Steering Committee, and served as the
chief candidate recruiter for House Democrats
from 1995 to 2000. He also served as Deputy
Majority Whip from 1987 to 1989.
6Congress and Health Reform
7Weve Got Goldwater to Thank for This
- 165 more Democrats than Republicans
- Lyndon Johnson
- Medicare
- Medicaid
- Maternal and Child Health Program
- Health Planning
- Regional Medical Programs
- Physician Training Programs
81964 Landslide Brought 42 New Northern Democrats
to the House
- Ways and Means Committee transformed allowing
development of payroll tax to finance Medicare
91981 Presidential Landslide
- Republican Senate
- Party leaders now controlled powerful chairman
- Post Watergate reforms enacted
101993 Bill Clinton - 43 Majority
- Largest first year class since 1949 in House
- Many experienced in State legislatures
- Whip weekly meetings to enhance common agenda
- Speaker Foley refused to strip dissident chairs
11U.S. Operated under Articles of Confederation for
13 Years
- Strong States
- Weak federal government
- Convention to modify Articles of Confederation
became the Constitutional Convention
12Constitutional Convention
- Popularly elected House
- Elitist Senate elected by State legislatures
- Strong executive with veto power
13David Broder
- Majority of Senators come from states that elect
20 of the House - 1995
- the two Senators from Oregon, which is the
population of greater Atlanta - chaired Appropriations and Finance
- Senate Majority Leader from Kansas
- Minority Leader from South Dakota
14(No Transcript)
15U.S. Senate
- 6 year terms
- Statewide elections
- 2 from each state
16Composition of the US Senate 110th Congress
(2007-2009)
- Majority Party Democrat (49 seats)
- Minority Party Republican (49 seats)
- Other Parties 1Independent 1 Independent
Democrat - Total Seats 100
- Note Senator Joseph Lieberman of Vermont was
reelected in 2006 as an Independent Democrat.
Senator Bernard Sanders of Vermont was elected as
an Independent.
17Senate Oath
- OATH REQUIRED BY THE CONSTITUTION AND BY LAW TO
BE TAKEN BY SENATORS"I, A__ B__, do solemnly
swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend
the Constitution of the United States against all
enemies, foreign and domestic that I will bear
true faith and allegiance to the same that I
take this obligation freely, without any mental
reservation or purpose of evasion and that I
will well and faithfully discharge the duties of
the office on which I am about to enter So help
me God." (5 U.S.C. 3331.)
18Standing Rules Standing Rules of The Senate RULE
XXIIIPRIVILEGE OF THE FLOOR
- Other than the Vice President and Senators, no
person shall be admitted to the floor of the
Senate while in session, except as follows The
President of the United States and his private
secretary. The President elect and Vice
President elect of the United States.
ExPresidents and exVice Presidents of the United
States. Judges of the Supreme Court. ExSenators
and Senators elect. The officers and employees
of the Senate in the discharge of their official
duties. ExSecretaries and exSergeants at Arms of
the Senate. Members of the House of
Representatives and Members elect. ExSpeakers of
the House of Representatives. The Sergeant at
Arms of the House and his chief deputy and the
Clerk of the House and his deputy. Heads of the
Executive Departments. Ambassadors and Ministers
of the United States. Governors of States and
Territories. Members of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff. The General Commanding the Army. The
Senior Admiral of the Navy on the active list.
Members of National Legislatures of foreign
countries and Members of the European Parliament.
Judges of the Court of Claims. The Mayor of the
District of Columbia. The Librarian of Congress
and the Assistant Librarian in charge of the Law
Library. The Architect of the Capitol. The
Chaplain of the House of Representatives. The
Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. The
Parliamentarian Emeritus of the Senate. Members
of the staffs of committees of the Senate and
joint committees of the Congress when in the
discharge of their official duties and employees
in the office of a Senator when inthe discharge
of their official duties (but in each case
subject to such rules or regulations as may be
prescribed by the Committee on Rules and
Administration). Senate committee staff members
and employees in the office of a Senator must be
on the payroll of the Senate and members of joint
committee staffs must be on the payroll of the
Senate or the House of Representatives.f the
Senate
19U.S. House
- 2 year terms
- District elections
- 435 members
- Reallocated every 10 years
20Composition U.S. House of Representatives110th
Congress
- Membership
- 435 Members
- 4 Delegates
- 1 Resident Commissioner
- Party Divisions
- 233 Democrats
- 202 Republicans
- 0 Independent
- 0 Vacancies
21Senate
- Fewer procedure rules
- Amendments do not have to be germane to the topic
of the bill - 1 Senator can filibuster
- filibuster used 22 times per year since 1990 vs.
12 times per year 1968 - 1989
22Leadership
- Leadership
- Both houses organized by parties
- Majority party selects leader
- Schedules
- Committee memberships
- Bill referral
- Conference committees
- Party strength inversely correlated with chairman
power
23Legislative Calendar
- A legislative day
- begins when a house of Congress meets and ends
when it adjourns. - The House almost always adjourns at the end of a
daily session, so its calendar day and
legislative day coincide. - The Senate often does not adjourn at the end of a
daily session, but instead "recesses," so when
the Senate next meets, it continues in the same
legislative day. As a result, a legislative day
in the Senate may extend over days, weeks, or
even months.
24Legislative Calendar
- Day certain or a day not yet determined (as
in a unanimous consent request) - Refers to calendar date
25Legislative Day
- Period of time following an adjournment of Senate
until another adjournment - No senator may speak twice upon one issue on the
same legislative day
26Legislative Calendar
- Senators refer to bill or nominations on the
calendarthese are on the legislative calendar
27Morning Hours
- Through unanimous consent, majority leader
provides a brief period (about 10 minutes each)
two leaders - Provide direct observations current events or
pending legislation - Also receive reports, communications, messages
from the House
28Senate Procedure
- Senate rules promote comprehensive debates
- A simple majority may end debate
- Filibuster can be ended by invoking cloture
- Usually by a 3/5 vote
- Even with cloture, debate can continue for 30
hours
29Filibuster
- Encourages consensus in Senate
- Unanimous consent agreements limit time available
for debate
30Not Germane Amendments
- Except when debating appropriations, budget, and
certain other measures - Senators may propose amendments not related to
the topic, that have not been reviewed by
committees. - Senators can also place business directly on the
Calendar of Business without committee referral - makes Senate schedule less predictable.
31Senate Majority Leader
- Proposes proposes bills or resolutions for the
Senate to consider.
32Committees
- Woodrow Wilson (1885)
- Congress in its committee rooms is Congress at
work - Roughly 20 standing committees in each house
- Conference committees are temporary to reconcile
differences between the houses
33Standing Committees
- 35 standing committees
- 19 in House, 16 in Senate
- 8,000 bills introduced in a 2-year session_at_80
Pass - Committee that drafts legislation also handles on
floor - every health bill moved by the Senate Labor
Committee passed in 99th Congress
34Committees
- Extends beyond Congress
- affects bureaucracy, agencies and commissions
- Cabinet offices spend 1/3 of their time on
Capitol Hill
35Appropriating vs. Authorizing Committees
- Appropriating
- House Ways and Means
- Senate Finance
- Appropriations
- Budget
36Forms of Legislative Business
- Bill
- Public --- most common
- Private designed to affect or benefit specific
individuals or group
37Bills
- Senate numbers bills in sequence
- Starting with 1
- Designation S
- Joint resolutions --same effect as a bill unless
amendment to the Constitution - S Con. Res.___
- For Senate concurrent resolution --- express
sense of Congress to President or others.
38House Bills
- H.R. ___
- H.R. Res.____ for House joint resolutions
- H.R. Con. Res. ___ for House Concurrent
resolutions
39Bills and Joint Resolutions
- Identical bills and joint resolutions, passed by
both Houses and approved by President become law - Public laws affect the Nation
- Private laws affect only a class or group of
individuals
40Constitutional Amendment
- Requires 2/3 vote with a quorum present
- Not sent to President
- Instead sent to GSA who transmits to the various
states - Must be ratified by ¾ of states
41Concurrent Resolutions
- Must be approved in identical form by both Houses
- Do not become law not sent to President
- Attested by Secretary of Senate and Clerk of
House - Transmitted to Administrator of GSA for
publication in Statutes at Large
42House vs. Senate
- Senate order of business simpler than House
- Procedure for both bodies founded on Jeffersons
Manual of Parliamentary Practice - Primary differences in method of calling up
business
43House vs. Senate
- Senate business is not divided into classes nor
are calendar days set aside for specific business - Senate is a continuing body (2/3 of Senate
returns after each election) - House readopts old rules inception of each
Congress - Senate has not reaffirmed rules since 1789
rules adopted since first Congress remain in force
44Bill Introduction
- Any member may introduce a bill
- Blank forms are kept at Clerk (House)
- Introducing member is the sponsor
- Must sign the bill
45Bills
- Co-sponsors do not have to sign the bill
- Co-sponsors may not be added after the bill has
been reported from the last committee - In no event shall the Speaker entertain a
request to drop the sponsor
46Bills in the Senate
- Senator may have Presiding Officer place the bill
in the record or be recognized to give comments - Senators frequently obtain consent to have the
bill printed in the Congressional Record - If a Senator objects to the introduction of a
bill, it is delayed one day. - If there is no objection, the bill is read and
placed in the Congressional Record
47Bills in the House of Representatives
- In the House, bills are not read.
- Printed in the Journal and Congressional Record.
- Bills referred according to the Rules of the
House. - Bill Number and committee referral appear in the
Congressional Record
48Senate
- Maintain decorum
- No senator may refer offensively to any State of
the Union
49Standing Committees
- 19 Standing Committees in the House
- 16 Standing Committees in the Senate
- Several Select Committees
- Four Standing Joint Committee which oversight,
but no legislative jurisdiction - House may create select committees or task forces
through formal resolution or informal agreement
among members
50Committee Referral
- Rules of House and Rules of Senate have 200
classification for bills - Prior to 1975, Speaker could refer to only one
bill - Now Speaker may make multiple referrals must
designate a primary committee -
51Health Committees Senate
- Senate Finance Committee
- Subcommittee on Medicaid and Health-Care for Low
Income Families - Subcommittee on Medicare, Long-Term Care and
Health Insurance - Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions
- Senate Appropriations Committee
- Senate Budget Committee
52Key Health Committees in the House
- House Ways and Means
- Subcommittee on Health
- House Appropriations Committee
- Subcommittee on Labor, HHS, and Education
- House Commerce Committee
- Subcommittee on Health and Environment
- House Budget Committee
53Committees Movement of Bills to the Floor
- House Committees pass bills to House Rules
Committee ? determines rules of debate including
whether amendments allowed - Senate Committees pass bills to floor
54Subcommittees
- 1979 Henry Waxman challenged for chair of House
Commerce Health and Environment Subcommittee - shared campaign money with supporters
- House Subcommittees heavily involved legislation
development, hearings, mark-ups - Still variability between committees on
importance - House full committees mark-ups - hearings rare
55Senate
- HELP Committee
- jurisdiction over 26 major health programs
- subcommittee under Ted Kennedy in 1970s
- eliminated by Orin Hatch in 1987
- 1987 Democrats regain Senate
- still no subcommittee
56House
- Healthcare policy - Commerce Health and
Environment Subcommittee - Under Dems - subcommittee establish its own
agenda - picked legislative battles - won most - lost Clinton bill
- Neither subcommittee and full able to agree
57Bill Movement
- House
- 85 measures on House floor first referred to
subcommittee - Senate
- 42 measures referred first to subcommittees
- 80 measures brought to House floor referred by
subcommittees - 46 in Senate
58Turf
- Committee chairs guard
- 1993 House Judiciary chairs would not allow
medical malpractice to go to Ways and Means - 1971 Paul Rogers changed subcommittee name to
Public Health and Environment Subcommittee - argued subcommittee should have jurisdiction over
Medicaid, then under Ways and Means - 4 years later, subcommittee gained Medicaid
59Subcommittee Jurisdiction Changed with Times
- 1970s - energy committees increased
- 1993 - 15 committees claimed health jurisdiction
- previously only 8 subcommittees claimed
jurisdiction
60Referral Assignment
- Clinton bill
- Senate Finance Chair
- Moynihan claimed jurisdiction over entire bill
(though he was known for welfare reform) - Senator Kennedy - chair of Labor and Human
Resources - the traditional authorizing committee claimed
jurisdiction over non-tax issues, including
employer mandate, premiums, insurance-buying
cooperatives on insurance reform
61Conference Committees
- Penultimate power
- Decisions final
- Voted up or down
- May differ on representation
- 1989 conference savings and loan
- 8 Senate, 94 House
62Conference Committees
- Powerful
- 1974 inserted state preemption clause in ERISA
- state insurance plans prohibited
- added 10 days before final passage without
knowledge most insurers, Department of Labor or
state government associations - has not been altered despite almost 30 years of
efforts
63Entitlements
- Combination of authorization and appropriation
- Funded automatically - do not require
appropriations - Spending for entitlements difficult to control
64Entitlements
- Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, Food Stamps,
AFDC - Avoids routine Congressional scrutiny
- Often indexed for COLA
65Entitlements
- FY 64
- 24 Federal spending
- grown 12 per year since 1964
- Social Security alone now 20 of Federal spending
- Between 1980 and 1990 Medicare grew 200
66Entitlements
- Social Security grows slower than health
entitlements - Medicare, Medicaid - popular programs - difficult to cut
- the political third rail
67Budgeting
- Authorizations
- establish or continue a program or agency
- Appropriations
- provides funding
- Process designed to separate policy from fiscal
decisions - Process typically sequential
68Budget Process
- First 150 years budget surplus
- federal spending was quite low
- 1930s Federal spending grew
- 1939 Bureau of Budget made part of Executive
Branch - 1970 became Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
69Budget Process
- Early 1970s presidential budget control peaked
- Richard Nixon refused to spend funds appropriated
by Congress for programs he did not support - Congress passed Congressional Budget Impoundment
Control Act of 1974 - established Senate and House Budget Committees
and CBO - mandated concurrent budget resolution
70Budgeting
- Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act
of 1985 - known as Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act
- forced Congress to reduce deficit
- 36 billion/year reduction
- sequestration- across board cuts if Congress
fails to make cuts - many entitlements - Social Security, medicaid,
AFDC exempted
71Administrative Budgeting
- CBO Produces Annual Report to House and Senate
Committees on budget - Provides a broad range of options
- Released in February
72The Congressional Budget Calendar
- Date Action
- Between first Monday in January President
transmits the budget, including a sequester
preview report - and first Monday in February
- Six weeks later Congressional committees report
budget estimates to budget committees - April 15 Action to be completed on
congressional budget resolution - May 15 House consideration of annual
appropriations bills may begin - June 15 Action to be completed on
reconciliation - June 30 Action on appropriations to be
completed by House - July 15 President transmits midsession review
of budget - August 20 OMB updates the sequester preview
- October 1 Fiscal year begins
73Budget Process
- President must submit budget by first Monday in
February - Budget establishes priorities for program funding
and funding level - In election years, the budget is a broad overview
74Budget Process
- Congress develops a budget resolution
- Defines parameters all budget related activities
- Defines size of budget, levels of funding, and
revenues - Must consider revenues for the forthcoming year
and next 10 fiscal years
75Budget Process
- Budget Resolution is not law
- Concurrent resolution of both Houses
76Budget Process
- Levels established in the budget resolution are
supported by procedural mechanisms followed in
both Houses
77Budget Process
- Budget resolution is an outline for the budget
- Legislation must be passed to implement
- Appropriation Act
- Changes in tax law
- Entitlement programs
78Budget Process
- Discretionary spending allocated to Appropriation
Committees - House and Senate Appropriation committees
sub-allocate spending to 13 subcommittee - Develop 13 appropriation bills
- Each bill must move through the legislative
process and be signed by the president
79Budget Process
- In years the Budget Resolution calls for changes
in taxes or entitlements - Budget Committee direct relevant committees to
enact legislation to reconcile changes
80Reconciliation
- Budget process has weakened the authorizing
committees - Increase leadership rule
- Authorizing Committees rarely launch new programs
- protect older programs from cuts
81Appropriation Committees
- Increased power
- Spending caps require tough decisions
- Important to special interests
82Reconciliation Bill
- Important to health policy
- Implements the concurrent budget resolution
- Little attention to specifics - no hearings
- In 1980s every major health legislation in
reconciliation bill - Health block grants
- Physician payment reform
83Reconciliation
- Henry Waxman used to expand Medicaid
- Many argued reconciliation made legislation more
secret, increased budget and staffing needs - delayed impact of changes
- increased power of smart chairs and members