From: *Travis*
Date: Tue, Jun 9, 2009
Subject:  House Democrats consider taxing benefits





There they go again...Democrats are always looking for ways to tax
something, anything, everything.

B

 Jun 9, 6:39 AM EDT

*Sources: House Democrats consider taxing benefits *

By DAVID ESPO
AP Special Correspondent

Virginian Pilot

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Despite a less-than-rousing reaction from the Obama
administration, House Democrats are considering a new tax on
employer-provided health benefits to help pay for expanding coverage to the
uninsured.

Several officials also said an outline of emerging legislation envisions a
requirement for all individuals to purchase affordable coverage, with an
unspecified penalty for those who refuse and a waiver for those who cannot
cover the cost.

"There's no sense having a mandate unless you have a contribution," Rep.
Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said
Monday. He referred to the suggestion as "play or pay."

Rangel and other senior Democrats arranged to bring members of the party's
rank and file up to date at a midday session Tuesday on the effort to draft
health care legislation at the top of President Barack Obama's agenda.

No details were available on the possible tax on health benefits, and
several officials stressed that no final decisions would be made for several
days.

The idea has been gaining currency in recent weeks as Congress intensifies
its search for more than $1 trillion to help pay for a health care overhaul.

Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., first floated the idea several weeks ago, and
emerged from a White House meeting last week saying Obama was open to it.

Obama's top aides did not disagree, even though the president attacked the
idea lustily last year when campaign rival John McCain proposed it. Instead,
White House officials say Obama prefers his own suggestions: cuts in
projected Medicare spending and tax increases on the wealthy that thus far
have gained little favor among Democrats in Congress.

Several officials said the House legislation will include a government-run
insurance option as well as plans offered by private companies. The
government option draws near-unanimous opposition from Republicans and
provokes concerns among many Democrats as well, although Obama has spoken
out in favor of it.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity, saying they did not want to
pre-empt the presentation to rank-and-file Democrats on Tuesday.

Under the House Democratic plan, individuals and small businesses would be
able to purchase coverage from a "health exchange" and the government would
require all plans to contain a minimum benefit, these officials added. No
applicant could be rejected for pre-existing conditions, nor could one be
charged a higher premium, they said.

House Democrats also are considering a wide-ranging change for Medicaid that
would provide a uniform benefit across all 50 states and increase payments
to providers, according to several officials. Medicaid is a joint
state-federal program of health coverage for the poor.

The disclosures came as the pace of activity quickened in both the House and
Senate on health insurance legislation. Obama scheduled a meeting Tuesday at
the White House with several Democrats.

Party leaders hope to pass legislation in both houses by early August and
complete work on a compromise measure in the fall for Obama's signature.

The president has stepped up his own involvement in the issue in recent
days, and there has been a flurry of negotiations involving outside interest
groups who have pledged to take steps to achieve savings within the private
insurance market.

Alongside those efforts, financing Obama's plan to spread coverage more
widely carries a price tag estimated at more than $1 trillion over a decade.
House Democrats are considering cutting projected Medicare payments to home
health care, pharmaceutical companies, insurance companies, hospitals and
others to cover costs, but not on the scale that the president proposed last
winter.

The option for taxing insurance benefits is also under consideration as part
of legislation taking shape across the Capitol in the Senate Finance
Committee.

Numerous options are possible, many of which involve either a tax levied
according to the value of an individual's employer-provided health plan or
on the benefits received by upper-income taxpayers.

The issue poses multiple potential problems for Obama, who has pledged not
to raise taxes on individuals making less than $250,000 and also ran
commercials criticizing McCain's call for a tax on health benefits in last
fall's campaign.

In recent weeks, the president and his aides have sought to straddle the
issue, neither accepting it nor ruling it out.

---

Associated Press writer Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar contributed to this report.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy
Policy <http://apdigitalnews.com/privacy.html>.


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