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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Nov 20 2014

Full Issue

Gruber Faces Backlash As Remarks Ripple Through States

Vermont, for instance, has said it will not pay him for his work on the state's health plan, and Michigan lawmakers plan to investigate his efforts there. Meanwhile, Rep. Andy Harris, R-Md., questioned a grant awarded to the MIT economist by the National Institutes of Health.

The Wall Street Journal: Fallout From Gruber’s Remarks Spreads

The fallout over comments made by a Massachusetts Institute of Technology economist about the Affordable Care Act has spread to the states, where both Republicans and Democrats are pulling back from a man who sold his expertise about health systems. Vermont said it won’t continue to pay Jonathan Gruber for his work on its health-insurance plan, which aims to create universal coverage financed with public funds. Michigan lawmakers said they plan to investigate work he did for that state. (Armour, 11/19)

The Associated Press: 'Stupidity' Remark Leads To Free Health Site Work

An economist who said "the stupidity of the American voter" helped pass the complex federal health care law has agreed to finish his work on Vermont's health insurance systems for free, a top state official said Wednesday. But the state will continue to pay assistants working with Jonathan Gruber, an economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who advised the Obama administration as it crafted the Affordable Care Act. Vermont will likely end up paying about $280,000 of the original $450,000 the state had agreed to pay Gruber's team and a subcontractor, said Lawrence Miller, director of health reform for Gov. Peter Shumlin. (Gram, 11/19)

The Washington Post's Fact Checker: Explainer: What Gruber Meant When He Said ‘If CBO Scored The Mandate As Taxes, The Bill Dies’

What did Gruber mean when he uttered this words in a now-infamous video that has inflamed hostility to the Affordable Care Act? This is a bit of a wonky subject, but we think it is worth explaining, because commentators on both the right and the left have jumped to the wrong conclusion. They assumed Gruber was discussing the fact that the administration had not described penalties for failing to get insurance as “taxes,” even though the Supreme Court later said Obamacare was constitutional because the individual mandate was indeed a tax. But that’s not correct. (Kessler, 11/19)

The Baltimore Sun: Maryland Rep. Questions NIH Grant To Gruber

Maryland Rep. Andy Harris on Wednesday questioned a National Institutes of Health grant awarded to MIT economist Jonathan Gruber, an administration health care consultant who has come under fire for recent comments about the "stupidity of the American voter." "Recent developments related to Dr. Gruber raise questions about his objectivity and judgment, and thus the utility of his research," Harris and Republican Rep. Joe Pitts of Pennsylvania wrote in a letter to Dr. Francis Collins, the director of Bethesda-based NIH. (Fritze, 11/19)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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