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The insurers' lobbying and campaign contributions are a fraction of what is spent by some other industries. Even so, the expenditures are enough to give them muscle and access and to hire armies of insiders from both parties, like Kenneth Duberstein, who was an aide to President Ronald Reagan, and Steven Elmendorf, who worked for House Democratic leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo. The industry is helped by powerful allies who oppose a public plan, including health care providers like hospitals, who are major employers in many congressional districts. Also against are the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and local insurance brokers, who hail from home towns across the country and sent 1,100 insurance agents to meetings in 468 congressional offices last month. Opposition from rural hospitals and local businesses led many fiscally conservative House Democrats, dubbed the Blue Dogs, to force House leaders to water down the public plan in a compromise last week. Hospitals and doctors, who wield huge lobbying and campaign contribution accounts, fear a public plan would underpay them, while businesses worry they'd be left paying higher taxes and insuring the oldest, frailest workers. Republicans and conservatives, solidly opposed, have labeled the public plan socialism or a government takeover of health care. At the helm of the industry's fight has been Karen Ignagni, a former AFL-CIO official and Democratic Senate aide who heads AHIP. Ignagni, who has visited the White House at least four times this year, told reporters opponents' efforts to "demonize" her industry were "a major step backward," and suggested that Democrats actually want to replace private insurers with government coverage
-- which Obama and others have denied. Even so, internal complaints are growing that the industry response has been too weak, underscoring the pressure that Democratic criticism is putting on insurers. "They're spineless," said John Goodman, who heads the conservative National Center for Policy Analysis. "That's easy for me to say because politicians can't regulate me out of business, but they think they're vulnerable." "They're getting beat up big-time," said Robert Rusbuldt, president of the Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of America, representing private agents and brokers. "I think they're being timid."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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