H.R. 1190 – Protecting Seniors’ Access to Medicare Act of 2015
(Rep. Roe, R-TN, and 235 cosponsors)
The
Affordable Care Act has improved the American health care system, on
which Americans can rely throughout life. After more than five years
under this law, 16.4 million Americans have gained health coverage. Up
to 129 million people who could have otherwise been denied or faced
discrimination now have access to coverage. And, health care prices
have risen at the slowest rate in nearly 50 years. As we work to make
the system even better, we are open to ideas that improve the
accessibility, affordability, and quality of health care, and help
middle-class Americans.
The
Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB) will be comprised of fifteen
expert members, including doctors and patient advocates, and will
recommend to the Congress policies that reduce the rate of Medicare
growth and help Medicare provide better care at lower costs. IPAB has
been highlighted by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO),
economists, and health policy experts as contributing to Medicare’s
long-term sustainability. The Board is prohibited from recommending
changes to Medicare that ration health care, restrict benefits, modify
eligibility, increase cost sharing, or raise premiums or revenues.
Under current law, the Congress retains the authority to modify, reject,
or enhance IPAB recommendations to strengthen Medicare, and IPAB
recommendations would take effect only if the Congress does not act to
slow Medicare cost growth.
H.R.
1190 would repeal and dismantle the IPAB even before it has a chance to
work. The bill would eliminate an important safeguard that, under
current law, will help reduce the rate of Medicare cost growth
responsibly while protecting Medicare beneficiaries and the traditional
program. While this safeguard is not projected to be needed now or for a
number of years given recent exceptionally slow growth in health care
costs, it could serve a valuable role should rapid growth in health
costs return.
CBO
estimates that repealing the IPAB would increase Medicare costs and the
deficit by $7 billion over 10 years. The Administration would strongly
oppose any effort to offset this increased Federal budget cost by
reducing the Prevention and Public Health Fund. The Affordable Care Act
created this Fund to help prevent disease, detect it early, and manage
conditions before they become severe. There has been bipartisan and
bicameral support for allocation of the Fund, and the Congress directed
uses of the Fund through FY 2014 and FY 2015 appropriations legislation. The
Fund supports critical investments such as tobacco use reduction and
programs to reduce health-care associated infections. By concentrating
on the causes of chronic disease, the Fund helps more Americans stay
healthy.
The
Administration is committed to strengthening Medicare for those who
depend on it and protection of the public’s health. We believe that
this legislation fails to accomplish these goals. If the President were presented with H.R. 1190, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
H.R. 2596 – Intelligence Authorization Act for FY 2016
(Rep. Nunes, R-CA)
The
Administration appreciates the Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence’s continued support of the Intelligence Community (IC) and
its efforts to ensure that the IC has the tools it needs to protect our
national security. The Administration supports a number of provisions
in H.R. 2596, the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016,
including the provision relating to business system transformation and
other technical and conforming provisions. However, while there are
areas of agreement with the Committee, the Administration strongly
objects to several provisions of the bill. If this bill were presented to the President, the President’s senior advisors would recommend to the President that he veto it.
The
Administration looks forward to reviewing the classified schedule of
authorizations once it becomes available and working with Congress to
address classified authorization levels. Nevertheless, the President
has been very clear about the core principle that he will not support a
budget that locks in sequestration, and he will not fix defense spending
without fixing non-defense spending. Sequestration levels add risk to
our national security by damaging the IC’s ability to provide strategic
warning to decision-makers across all levels of government; to improve
collection technologies to exploit existing and future opportunities and
increase resilience; to provide cutting-edge technical analysis of
counterintelligence, cyber, advanced weapons, and proliferation threats;
to spur IC integration; and to increase intelligence capacity by
investing in critical information technologies. The Administration
would strongly object to a bill that fails to authorize sufficient
funding for the IC’s priorities, and instead uses Overseas Contingency
Operations (OCO) funding in ways that leaders of both parties have made
clear are inappropriate. Shifting base budget resources into OCO risks
undermining a mechanism meant to fund incremental costs of overseas
conflicts and fails to provide a stable, multi-year budget on which
defense and intelligence planning is based. The use of OCO funding to
circumvent budget caps in defense and intelligence spending also ignores
the long-term connection between national security and economic
security and fails to account for vital national security functions
carried out at non-defense agencies.
Furthermore,
the President’s national intelligence strategy depends on investing
every dollar where it will have the greatest effect. The Administration
would object should the classified schedule of authorizations continue
to authorize funding of unrequested, multi-billion dollar acquisition
programs that would provide little new capability at the expense of core
mission areas that address validated intelligence requirements. The FY
2016 Budget includes a prioritized and balanced investment plan, and
these extra programs create ripple effects across the entire
intelligence portfolio.
The Administration looks forward to working with Congress to address the concerns outlined in more detail below.
Guantanamo Detainee Provisions:
The Administration strongly objects to several provisions of the bill
that relate to the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. As the
Administration has said many times before, operating this facility
weakens our national security by draining resources, damaging our
relationships with key allies and partners, and emboldening violent
extremists. Rather than taking steps to bring this chapter of our
history to a close, as the President has repeatedly called upon Congress
to do, this bill aims to extend it. Not only would it extend certain
existing restrictions, it would impose an additional unwise and
unnecessary restriction that would further impede efforts to responsibly
close the facility. Sections 321 and 322 would prohibit the use of
funds to transfer Guantanamo detainees to the United States or to
construct or modify any facility in the United States to house
detainees. Section 323 would seek to prohibit certain foreign transfers
entirely. The Administration has objected to the inclusion of these
and similar provisions in prior legislation. These restrictions are
unwarranted and threaten to interfere with the Executive Branch’s
ability to determine the appropriate disposition of detainees and its
flexibility to determine when and where to prosecute them, based on the
facts and circumstances of each case and our national security
interests, and when and where to transfer them consistent with our
national security and our humane treatment policy. Sections 321 and 323
would, moreover, violate constitutional separation-of-powers principles
under certain circumstances, and section 323 could in some
circumstances interfere with a detainee’s right to the writ of habeas
corpus. In addition, sections 331 and 333 would require burdensome and
unnecessary reporting to Congress and could interfere with the
President’s authority to protect sensitive national security
information.
Prohibition on Sharing of Certain Information in Response to Foreign Government Inquiries: The
Administration strongly objects to section 308, which prohibits the IC
from responding to, sharing, or authorizing the sharing of any
non-public information related to an intelligence activity carried out
by the United States in response to a legislative or judicial inquiry
from a foreign government into the intelligence activities of the United
States. This provision could affect our relationships with foreign
partners and interferes with the President’s authority to conduct
foreign relations and control the dissemination of sensitive national
security information.
Cyber Threat Intelligence Integration Center (CTIIC): The
Administration is committed to establishing the CTIIC as a robust
element of the government’s cyber capabilities, but objects to the
language in this bill concerning the CTIIC’s role and responsibilities.
The Administration intends for the CTIIC to be a national intelligence
center focused on “connecting the dots” regarding malicious foreign
cyber threats to the nation and cyber incidents affecting U.S. national
interests, and on providing reliable all-source analysis to U.S. policy
makers. This bill seeks to significantly expand CTIIC’s roles and
responsibilities beyond those contained in the President’s February 25
memorandum directing the establishment of the CTIIC. Further, the bill
gives the CTIIC certain intelligence mission management functions
already assigned elsewhere in the IC. Given the rapidly changing nature
of cyber threats to the United States, the CTIIC will require
flexibility in executing its core functions. Furthermore,
the limits this bill would place on CTIIC’s resources, and the
expansive approach the bill would take with regard to CTIIC’s missions,
are unnecessary and unwise, and would risk the CTIIC being unable to
fully perform the core functions assigned to it in the bill. Instead,
the Administration believes that responsibilities given to the CTIIC in
the President’s February 25
memorandum are appropriate given the need for the CTIIC to be a
tailored, nimble organization that supports and enables the Federal
government’s efforts to identify, defend against, and respond to cyber
threats.
Reporting Requirements:
The Administration also objects to certain reporting requirements in
the bill. For instance, section 303 would prohibit the use of funds to
initiate any new special access program unless the Director of National
Intelligence or the Secretary of Defense submits a notification to the
congressional committees 30 days before initiating such program, subject
to a limited exception. Such a requirement is unduly burdensome and
does not offer the IC sufficient flexibility to efficiently manage
special access programs while meeting the oversight needs of the
Congress. The Administration also objects to section 332, which
requires a report to Congress every 60 days for the next three years on
foreign fighter flows to and from Syria. These provisions are
unnecessary and overly burdensome and could, in certain circumstances,
interfere with the President’s authority with regard to sensitive
national security information. The Administration stands ready to work
with Congress on possible alternatives. The Administration is committed
to ensuring that the relevant committees have the information they need
for effective oversight of the IC and looks forward to working with
Congress to address our concerns with these provisions.
H.R. 160 – Protect Medical Innovation Act of 2015
(Rep. Paulsen, R-MN, and 282 cosponsors)
The
Affordable Care Act has improved the American health care system, on
which Americans can rely throughout life. After more than five years
under this law, 16.4 million Americans have gained health coverage. Up
to 129 million people who could have otherwise been denied or faced
discrimination now have access to coverage. And, health care prices
have risen at the slowest rate in nearly 50 years. As we work to make
the system even better, we are open to ideas that improve the
accessibility, affordability, and quality of health care, and help
middle-class Americans.
H.R. 160,
which would provide a large tax break to profitable corporations by
repealing the medical device excise tax, does not advance these goals.
The medical device industry, like others, will benefit from millions of
new consumers who are gaining health coverage under the Affordable Care
Act. This excise tax is one of several designed so that industries that
gain from the coverage expansion will help offset the cost of that
expansion. Its repeal would take away a funding source for financial
assistance that is working to improve coverage and affordability and
would increase the Federal deficit by $24.4 billion over 10 years.
In
sum, H.R. 160 would increase the deficit to finance a permanent and
costly tax break for industry without improving the health system or
helping middle-class Americans. If the President were presented with H.R. 160, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
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