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At key moment, Obama leaves health post unfilled

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
October 30, 2009

President Barack Obama speaks at the Veterans of Foreign Wars National Convention in Phoenix, Monday, Aug. 17, 2009. (Alex Brandon/AP)

Medicare and Medicaid, the federal government's health insurance programs for the elderly and poor, play a big role in the health care reform proposals being considered on Capitol Hill. President Obama and Democrats in Congress hope to cut Medicare spending by nearly a half-trillion dollars over the next decade, and reform plans call for a big expansion of Medicaid during the same period.

The proposals raise serious questions. Is it really possible to take so much money out of Medicare and not affect coverage? Is expanding Medicaid a good idea?

Congress would like to pose those questions, and many more, to the top administrator of the Medicare and Medicaid programs. Except there isn't one. Even though the job is critical to the current health care debate -- and would become even more critical should reform pass -- Obama hasn't gotten around to filling it yet.

The position is officially known as the administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, usually referred to as CMS, which is part of the Department of Health and Human Services. The administrator oversees about $700 billion in annual spending -- more than the entire defense budget. It is a very big job.

But at the moment, it's held by an acting administrator, Charlene Frizzera, formerly the chief operating officer of CMS. Frizzera has extensive experience in the field, but so far at least, she is not the permanent head of CMS. When Obama names a candidate for the job, he or she will have to be approved by the Senate Finance Committee and confirmed by the entire Senate.

"It's a very big concern that the agency lacks a permanent administrator," says Iowa Sen. Charles Grassley, the ranking Republican on the Finance Committee. "An acting administrator, no matter how well-qualified, lacks the authority to lead and is difficult to hold accountable."

Even without a permanent chief, CMS is playing a big, and often controversial, role in the current health care debate. You may remember the flap when the government imposed a gag order on some insurers who had the audacity to tell their policyholders that Medicare cuts might affect their coverage. That gag order, since lifted, came from CMS.

The agency is also coming up with analyses of various health care proposals that don't always please Democratic leaders. A few weeks ago, CMS actuaries concluded that the version of the House reform bill then under consideration would cost more than was thought, and that Medicare savings would be less than estimated but would still mean benefit cuts for some seniors. It wasn't exactly what House Democrats wanted to hear.

The last time Medicare was such a hot topic in Washington, during the debate over the 2003 Medicare prescription drug entitlement, George W. Bush's head of CMS, Thomas Scully, was an influential player on Capitol Hill. Now, with the stakes even higher, there's nobody to play that part.

Asked about the vacancy, White House spokesman Reid Cherlin said, "Filling this role is a priority for the administration, and we're working to name an administrator as soon as possible." But some Republicans suspect the White House is not entirely unhappy with the situation as it exists today.

"If Obama nominated someone for the job, lawmakers would have an intense interest in their views about health care," says one Republican Senate aide. That could make running CMS a very uncomfortable job, because senators would expect the administrator to testify at length on why the White House believed extensive cuts could be made to Medicare without cutting the quality of care. So perhaps the president is content to have no one in the job while the debate is going on; the position can be filled later, when the heat is off.

The top spot at CMS isn't the only important job vacancy in the Obama administration. According to the White House Transition Project, a group that monitors the job-filling process, a large number of key positions in the administration remain unfilled. As of Oct. 1, for example, Obama had nominated candidates for fewer than half of the positions in the Treasury and Justice departments that require Senate confirmation.

But given the circumstances, the top job at CMS is special. Congress is considering huge changes to our health care system, especially Medicare and Medicaid. Lawmakers need an authoritative voice to give them the unvarnished facts before taking actions that can't be undone. But the president hasn't seen fit to fill the job.

Byron York, The Examiner's chief political correspondent, can be contacted at byork@washingtonexaminer.com. His column appears on Tuesday and Friday, and his stories and blog posts appears on www.ExaminerPolitics.com ExaminerPolitics.com



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Mad Monica

Oct 30, 2009

I'm sure he's a bit vapor-locked when it comes to finding someone who has paid their taxes and can pass confirmation. In fact, he might never find someone who can get over THAT hurdle. At least, not anyone who has "earned" such a high-level spot. Buying one of those must cost alot of cake.

 

Sunshine Connie

Oct 30, 2009

Perhaps POTUS can't find enough semi-educated people with real experience and his lack of morals to want the pain of his failing administration?

 

depaz

Oct 30, 2009

Aw, c'mon, give the guy a break. He HAS brought plenty of czars on board. I think he's singlehandedly trying to lower the unemployment rate with their appointments!!

Heard someone on Fox this morning talking about how Medicare was charged for several tests and procedures that had not been performed on him and in states he had never been to. Reporting it to Medicare, his attorney general, and anybody else he could think of brought no responses. Before passing ANYTHING that increases the scope of thesse giveaways, every congressman / woman and senator should take a month of their time and do some investigating into the fraud that is so rife. THEN talk to me about reforming the system. . . . .

 

flacracker

Oct 30, 2009

"Vapor-locked?" Lord, I haven't heard that term since I was a kid driving around in an old broken down '34 Ford coupe. Back then the term meant the fuel in the gas line, for some unexplained reason, quit flowing: hence "vapor-locked." You had to cool the gas line if I remember correctly. Thanks, Mad Monica, for bringing back a memory in this old man's mind.

 

dennis59

Oct 30, 2009

"When Obama names a candidate for the job, he or she will have to be approved by the Senate Finance Committee and confirmed by the entire Senate"---No one in their right mind would take this job. Why do you think the Treasury still has 'job openings'?...No one wants to work for 'Little Timma".

 

One Vote

Oct 30, 2009

I wonder if this is a five year appointment like the FAA.
If so, Obama could be playing games here, appointing someone late in his term to give his programs some longevity when he's ousted in 2012.

 

syn

Oct 30, 2009

Obama is a great leader of the 57th State which upholds Harvard's Constitution and where lives NY Times/WAPO unknown sources which are always referenced as the authorities.

 

Ex-HHS

Oct 30, 2009

As a former HHS official, I can say that his is an absolute scandal. CMS Administrator is, in many policy-related ways, more important that the HHS Secretary. Leaving this job open is a blatant dodge by this administration. It is more proof that this White House is all smoke and mirrors. Real governance will always take a back seat to political expediency.

 

StepIntoTheLight

Oct 30, 2009

@ Ex-HHS -- thanks for pointing out the clear motive behind this Administration. Obama clearly does not want anyone to question his agenda, so clearly it is in his (and the Democrats) best interest to leave the post vacant until they pass this flawed legislation. Vote Now, Explain Later...

 

Campbell

Oct 30, 2009

One wonders why??? Perhaps he has a good Marxist in the wings, but is afraid of introducing another one so soon on the heels of Anita and Jones. Or he can have a Czar do it and hence does not need Senate confirmation.
Whatever the reason, it is political and not in the best interests of the American people. But is anyone surprised?

 

WatchDog

Oct 30, 2009

Wonder if this is typical that at almost a year in, more than half of the positions in Treasury and the Justice departments haven't even been nominated let alone confirmed?

 

MMcFM

Oct 31, 2009

Come on you guys!!!! You KNOW this is deliberate -- he doesn't want to fill it with the radical person he intends to have the job because they will become the most tangible lightening rod in this whole, evil mess.

My best guess is Ezekiel Emmanuel will wrap Medicare in with the entire single-payer package and be the czar of them all. And, if you don't know enough about him, you need to read the January 09 Lancet article he co-wrote about the Allocation of Scarce Medical Resources -- which, of course aren't scarce now, but will be under the draconian rules of our Marxist medical care....

 

Just Thinking

Nov 3, 2009

Dictators have goals and mandates. Any and all obstacles will be squashed, legally or by force, or in this instance by omission.

 


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