Baltimore Sun

Price sworn in as health chief

Cabinet pick likely to play pivotal role in replacing ACA

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s new health secretary took office Friday after becoming the latest Cabinet nominee to eke out a confirmati­on victory in the bitterly divided Senate.

Vice President Mike Pence administer­ed the oath of office to Tom Price, of Georgia, at the White House hours after the Senate confirmed him, 52-47, in a party-line vote early Friday.

That roll call came in the dead of night, thanks to Democrats’ tactic of forcing prolonged debates to broadcast their opposition to Trump and his team.

Pence said Price, an ort hopedic surgeon, is “uniquely qualified” for the job and playing a leading role in helping the Republican-controlled Congress achieve its top priority of repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act.

Pence called Price “the most principled expert on health care policy” in Congress.

Price served seven terms in the House.

As head of the Health and Human Services Department, Price will take center stage as the administra­tion and congressio­nal Republican­s try delivering on their pledge to scrap President Barack Obama’s health care law and substitute their own programs.

After years of trying, they finally command both the White House and Congress but have struggled to craft a plan with enough votes to win approval.

Price is likely to play a lead role both in shaping health care legislatio­n and issuing department regulation­s aimed at weakening Obama’s statute.

“Having Dr. Tom Price at the helm of HHS gives us a committed ally in our work to repeal and replace Obamacare,” House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said Friday.

Democrats focused on the legislatio­n Price once sponsored, including efforts to kill Obama’s law. He’s also sought to reshape Medicare’s guarantee of Vice President Mike Pence administer­s the oath to Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, alongside his wife, Betty. Pence was confirmed by the Senate in a 52-47 vote. health coverage for seniors into a voucher-like program, cut Medicaid, which helps poor people afford care, and halt federal payments to Planned Parenthood because it provides abortions.

Sen Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., conceded that Price had experience but added, “It’s the kind of experience that should horrify you.”

That battle won, Republican­s were preparing to next win Senate confirmati­on for financier Steven Mnuchin to be Treasury secretary. He was expected to get the chamber’s ap- proval Monday, along with Trump’s choice to head the Department of Veterans Affairs, physician David Shulkin.

Republican­s have lauded Mnuchin’s long career in the finance and banking worlds.

As they did with Price, Democrats are attacking Mnuchin’s background, such as criticizin­g OneWest bank, which he led, for not protecting thousands of homeowners from unnecessar­y foreclosur­es. They also said he failed to disclose nearly $100 million in assets on forms he filed with the Senate.

Price’s nomination is part of a larger clash in which Republican­s want to quickly enact priorities long blocked by Obama. Democrats, with few tools as Congress’ minority, are making a show of resistance, stretching some floor debates to the maximum 30 hours Senate rules allow.

The high stakes plus Trump’s belligeren­t style have fed the combativen­ess. They’ve also produced remarkable scenes, including Democratic boycotts of hearings, Republican­s suspending committee rules to approve nominees and GOP senators voting to bar War- ren from joining one debate.

Democrats have accused Price of lying about his acquisitio­n of discounted shares of an Australian biotech company and benefiting from insider informatio­n. They’ve also asserted he pushed legislatio­n to help a medical implant maker whose stock he’d purchased.

Price has said he’s done nothing wrong. It’s illegal for members of Congress to engage in insider trading.

His close confirmati­on was the fourth consecutiv­e Senate clash over a Cabinet nominee that closely followed party lines.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions was confirmed 5247, after Warren was punished for reading a 1986 letter by Coretta Scott King criticizin­g him. Betsy DeVos became Education secretary 51-50, thanks to a tie-breaking vote by Pence.

And Former Exxon Mobil CEO Rex Tillerson became secretary of state 56-43.

Those close tallies are a departure from most Cabinet votes, in which the Senate usually grants overwhelmi­ng approval in a show of deference to letting presidents choose their teams.

Just four of 31 votes for then-President Barack Obama’s Cabinet vacancies drew at least 40 “no” votes, as did only two of 34 votes for Cabinet positions under President George W. Bush.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/AP ??
ANDREW HARNIK/AP

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