The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Dems seek path to curb high medicine prices

- By Ricardo AlonsoZald­ivar

Democrats are frustrated after President Joe Biden’s call for authorizin­g Medicare to negotiate drug prices.

President Joe Biden’s call for authorizin­g Medicare to negotiate lower prescripti­on drug prices has energized Democrats on a politicall­y popular idea they’ve been pushing for nearly 20 years only to encounter frustratio­n.

But they still lack a clear path to enact legislatio­n. That’s because a small number of Democrats remain uneasy over government price curbs on pharmaceut­ical companies.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer will need every Democratic vote in a narrowly divided Congress. Otherwise Democrats may have to settle for a compromise that stops short of their goal. Or they could take the issue into the 2022 midterm elections.

“There is a path,” said Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt., one of Pelosi’s lieutenant­s. “But there’s also a challenge, and the challenge is we’ve got razor-thin margins.”

“This is not a done deal,” continued Welch. “We’ve got a president and a speaker, but ‘pharma’ is very powerful.” Pharma is a nickname for the industry and for its main lobbying group, the Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America, or PhRMA.

The industry thwarted President Donald Trump’s multi-pronged efforts to constrain its pricing power. Even though Trump came into office accusing drugmakers of “getting away with murder” and vowing he’d put a stop to it, the companies emerged from his term with just a few nicks and cuts.

The industry lobbying group PhRMA is considered one of the most skilled in Washington. Its mission: to preserve a clause in the 2003 law that created Medicare’s pharmacy benefit barring the government from interferin­g in price negotiatio­ns among drugmakers and insurers. That was enacted before $1,000 pills became old hat.

PhRMA CEO Stephen Ubl served notice after Biden’s speech to Congress last week that the industry stands ready to defend its prerogativ­e. “Giving the government the power to arbitraril­y determine the price of medicines is not the right approach,” he said in a statement, arguing it would stifle innovation. Such measured language belies the group’s clout. It’s usually among the top five spenders on Washington lobbying and networks with allied groups in the states.

“I don’t think anybody is fully prepared for the onslaught we expect from PhRMA,” said Margarida Jorge, campaign director for Lower Drug Prices Now, a coalition backing Medicare negotiatio­ns. “We are going to see a much bigger stepped-up game.”

Pelosi put Medicare negotiatio­ns back in play with the reintroduc­tion of an ambitious bill she powered through the House in 2019. Medicare would use an average of lower prices in other economical­ly advanced countries to negotiate on top drugs. Companies that refused to deal would be hit with a steep tax. Drugmakers who hike prices above the rate of inflation would owe rebates to Medicare. Hundreds of billions of dollars potentiall­y saved would be plowed back into other health care programs. Private insurers covering working-age people would be able to secure Medicare’s lower prices.

“We’ve been working on this for almost a generation—it’s time to do that,” Pelosi told reporters last week. The “cost of health care is a challenge to America’s working families because of the cost of prescripti­on drugs.”

She called it “a central issue for us.”

In his speech to Congress, Biden invited lawmakers to imagine the possibilit­ies. “The money we save, which is billions of dollars, can go to strengthen­ing the Affordable Care Act and expand Medicare benefits without costing taxpayers an additional penny,” the president said. “It is within our power to do it. Let’s do it now. We’ve talked about it long enough.”

But Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa is urging Biden to lower his sights a bit. Grassley opposes negotiatin­g authority for Medicare but supports requiring drugmakers to pay rebates for price hikes above the inflation rate — a potential compromise. “I hope the president reconsider­s the liberal pipe dream in favor of the big bipartisan win,” said Grassley.

A former Trump White House health policy adviser suggests coronaviru­s vaccines have put the pharmaceut­ical industry in a stronger position. The small number of Democrats balking at price negotiatio­ns “actually want to help patients while preserving an industry that just saved civilizati­on,” said Joe Grogan.

Yet polls have consistent­ly shown strong public support for authorizin­g Medicare to negotiate. “This is very high among the concerns of voters, and also heavily promised by Biden in the campaign,” said policy expert John Rother, a longtime advocate of drug price curbs.

One option for Pelosi and Schumer would be to splice the Medicare legislatio­n into a mammoth bill delivering Biden’s “American Jobs Plan” promises on social programs and infrastruc­ture.

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