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The Obamacare Non-Exemption: Congressional employees are not receiving a “special handout.”
National Review ^ | 09/28/2013 | Patrick Brennan

Posted on 09/29/2013 7:17:03 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

The Affordable Care Act, a.k.a. Obamacare, has many problematic provisions. Right now one that affects a remarkably small number of Americans — members of Congress and their staff — is attracting a great deal of controversy. It is also causing a great deal of confusion.

The dispute has its origin in the debate over the law in 2010. Republican senator Chuck Grassley suggested an amendment intended to make Democrats balk: Members of Congress and their staff would have to buy their insurance from the health-care exchanges. The amendment explicitly said that the federal government should continue making the same employer contributions. It was not designed to cut employees’ benefits, but rather to make sure they had a stake in the quality and efficiency of the exchanges. Democrats actually accepted it, and put it into the eventually passed bill, but without the provision for employer contributions.

The law thus treats Congress and its staff substantially differently than all other Americans. Many Americans who now get insurance coverage from their employer may end up having to go on the exchanges; but only congressional employees are actually forced onto them, with the option of an employer plan prohibited by law. In the private sector, some of the savings from ending employer plans can go to higher wages, which employees can use to buy insurance from the exchanges. (Though that contribution will probably be after-tax earnings, rather than the pre-tax premium contributions employers make now.) It’s possible there will be exceptions, but for the most part the market simply won’t allow companies to cut an employee’s compensation by as much as yanking away their entire employer health-care contribution amounts to.

While Trader Joe’s, for instance, is discontinuing its health-insurance plan for part-time employees, the company will be giving each of them $500 a year — which sounds like a pittance, but when it is combined with the subsidies that low-wage employees like these will receive, coverage on the exchanges will actually cost most employees less out-of-pocket than what they got from their employer. There will be no such substitution in congressional offices, because the amendment does not increase the budget for legislative salaries. Some congressional employees would receive tax-credit subsidies on the individual market, like low-wage workers, but most would not.

When you hear about a “congressional exemption” from Obamacare, this refers to the fact that the Office of Personnel Management, part of the executive branch, has chosen to make up for this differential treatment by paying part of congressional employees’ health-care premiums on the new exchanges. They haven’t been “exempted” from the amendment that forces them onto the exchanges, in a way no other American is.

OPM decided to contribute the same amount to these exchanges that the government now spends on congressional employees’ health benefits ($5,000 for individuals, $11,000 for families). This decision was probably illegal, since Congress didn’t authorize funds for the plan, as Cato’s Michael Cannon explains.

Congressmen and their staff, then, are getting a questionable workaround from the law — but it’s from a provision of the law that treated them particularly badly rather than neutrally. The net result of the law and the workaround isn’t a “special handout” for congressional employees.

Senator David Vitter (R., La.) says that Congress should pass an amendment to do away with this supposed “exemption.” The law would actually layer another regulation onto Congress (and executive-branch appointees, too) that doesn’t apply to any other American, by preventing their employer from contributing to their health insurance.

The reason the White House provided its procedurally dodgy solution, which Vitter aims to address, is that passing a fix through Congress would probably be politically difficult. But unless you think every congressional employee’s salary should be cut by between $5,000 and $11,000 (or, alternatively, that they don’t deserve any employer contributions to their health-care coverage), you shouldn’t have a problem with your congressman voting for it. (For one, such a salary cut would make Congress more a place for well-off Americans than it already is.)

Senator Ted Cruz has actually suggested that the former’s amendment should be expanded to every employee of the federal government — from D.C. schoolteachers to much of the active-duty military. (Vitter says he opposes this because it is infeasible politically.)

The defense of the provision remaining as is — ending the federal contributions to Congress’s exchange premiums — relies on the idea that Congress (or literally almost all federal employees, as Cruz suggested) should suffer the worst possible effects of whatever federal law is passed. That’s a much more punitive intent than the original Grassley amendment had.

With the destructive effects of Obamacare looming, this punishment may sound appealing. But do we really approve of the idea in other circumstances? Do we believe that Congress and its staffers should pay the highest marginal tax rates, regardless of income; that every congressman must have served in the military to vote to declare war; that congressional offices have to carry out any and all reporting requirements and regulations they impose on a particular industry; and so on? There are probably better ways to prevent Congress from passing bad laws.

The congressional staffers, D.C. teachers, and other federal employees Senator Cruz hopes to force onto the exchanges probably receive overly generous health-care benefits now. The executive branch’s fix doesn’t reduce them at all (for now); shifting them onto the exchanges might be a good time to move toward a less generous model. But people who happen to be paid by the federal treasury don’t deserve to have the entire value of their existing coverage stripped away, as almost no Americans will experience.

Nearly half the people in Congress have worked, and are still working, against Obamacare. Senator Vitter’s amendment proposes to cut their pay in order to make a point — a point based on a misunderstanding.

— Patrick Brennan is an associate editor at National Review.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: congress; exemption; obamacare
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To: St_Thomas_Aquinas
NRO: Apologist for the welfare state.

I saw their "Washington Editor" on C-Span last night in between some votes. He kept mentioning John McCain's actions on this so far, as if that is the proper example of how the House should be behaving. Yes, McCain.

Poor Bill Buckley must be rolling over in his grave.

Apparently closet liberals are well on their way to infiltrating conservative media, just as they already infiltrated the mainstream media, academia, etc. While I used to be an avid reader of NRO, it's one of the last places I'd look for info now. If they're not already "liberal", they're at least fully "establishment" now, and their opinions seem more about subliminal messages, than particularly insightful.

21 posted on 09/29/2013 8:20:21 AM PDT by Golden Eagle (In God We Trust)
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To: Gaffer
Employer provided health insurance benefits are NOT generally taxed as income received by employees.


22 posted on 09/29/2013 8:21:50 AM PDT by kenavi (Debunk THIS!)
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To: jurroppi1

Its also important to note that these staffers are not fresh out of college kids like so many seem to believe.

For instance, One of John McCain’s former chiefs of staff left his office to take a job as VP of Lockheed Martin. She left LM and is currently back in DC as the GOP staff director for the armed services committee.


23 posted on 09/29/2013 8:22:00 AM PDT by cripplecreek (REMEMBER THE RIVER RAISIN!)
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To: kenavi

A subsidy is NOT an employer provided health plan. It should be taxable just like a bonus.


24 posted on 09/29/2013 8:50:52 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: Gaffer

Spoken like a tax loving Dem.


25 posted on 09/29/2013 10:18:09 AM PDT by Henry Hnyellar
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To: SeekAndFind
Democrats actually accepted it, and put it into the eventually passed bill, but without the provision for employer contributions……..

OPM decided to contribute the same amount to these exchanges that the government now spends on congressional employees’ health benefits ($5,000 for individuals, $11,000 for families). This decision was probably illegal, since Congress didn’t authorize funds for the plan, as Cato’s Michael Cannon explains.

What has happened to respect for the law? The author clearly makes the case that subsidizing health insurance premiums for congress and their employees is not authorized by law but then goes on to applaud the illegal subsidy because it is fair. Decisions are not made by agencies (OPM) but by individuals and the individual who made and signed off on this decision should be located and prosecuted for misapplication of federal funds as should any dispersing official who follows the order to illegally spend government money. There is a four year statute of limitations for this type crime so it could be dealt with by the next administration but in any case, it should not be allowed to stand.

26 posted on 09/29/2013 11:16:58 AM PDT by etcb
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To: Henry Hnyellar

Ordinarily, I am against taxes, but when the group asking for special favors is the entire Congress and its employees, I’d say tax the hell out of the booty they’re stealing from us.

How is that ‘spoken like a tax-loving Dem?’


27 posted on 09/30/2013 2:13:48 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: nhwingut

“All I can say is follow the money.”

It takes some writer this many words to “explain” what should be a very simple thing. This whole Obamacare business reminds me of this short Abbott and Costello skit.

“It didn’t cost that much - you gave me too much money”:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7pMYHn-1yA


28 posted on 09/30/2013 2:25:31 AM PDT by 21twelve ("We've got the guns, and we got the numbers" adapted and revised from Jim M.)
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To: Old North State

I am not entirely sure I understand the gist of your response. Sounds to me like you agree with my sentiments, but I figured I might as well ask for clarification.

Do you mean what’s good for the gander is good for the goose?


29 posted on 09/30/2013 10:53:10 AM PDT by jurroppi1
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To: jurroppi1

What I was trying to say was that those who are supplied with income (government employee) from money taken by force from others(net taxpayers), they should have no expectation of receiving a greater level of benefits than the least of those taxpayers. Government employees should not have their own health care costs paid for by people who do not get the same treatment, yet are forced to pay for theirs. Private sector employers, those subject to market forces, can offer whatever they are able because their income arising from voluntary exchanges. IBM or Exxon can’t force me to supply them with income, but if I do so of my own free will, they can spend the money as they please. So, in a way, I guess you could say what is good for the goose is good for the gander, as long as the gander doesn’t show up with a badge and a gun.


30 posted on 10/10/2013 10:35:44 AM PDT by Old North State
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To: Old North State

Got it, I figured we basically agreed.


31 posted on 10/10/2013 10:51:07 AM PDT by jurroppi1
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To: SeekAndFind

So an associate editor of the NR says we should favor our Congressmen voting for this—even though it is illegal?

I bet if you compared the change in household income since 2008, the Congress critters and their staff have gone up by thousands, while the average American household has gone down. Add in how much more the average American is going to be forced to pay for health insurance, and Congress has inflicted more harm on the public than this law would inflict on them.

The idea that we’re not going to get quality Congressmen (snicker, snicker) over a few grand in healthcare costs is silly. The bulk of the financial benefits of being in Congress come in the pensions and lobbying after they’re out of Congress anyway.

And yes, Congress and their staff absolutely should not be shielded from the healthcare costs they inflict upon us because Uncle Sam is picking up the full tab on their premium plans.


32 posted on 10/10/2013 11:31:15 AM PDT by 9YearLurker
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