The bill has virtually no chance of becoming
law but will be a key plank in Democrats’ 2020 campaign efforts.
Yasmeen Abutaleb Dec.
12, 2019 at 2:18 p.m. CST
House Democrats
passed Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s sweeping legislation Thursday to lower the cost
of prescription drugs on a largely party-line vote — a bill that will almost
certainly not become law but moves the Democrats a step closer to their
longtime goal to negotiate Medicare drug prices and address voters’ concerns over rising health
costs.
The bill, which
passed 230 to 192 with unanimous Democratic support, has already been declared “dead on
arrival” in the Senate. The White House has indicated President
Trump would veto it if it came to his desk.
But the measure,
which would allow the government to negotiate lower prices for up to 250
prescription drugs in Medicare, will be a key plank in Democratic efforts to maintain
control of the House of Representatives in 2020. The Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee said it planned to target ads to voters in
swing districts and those currently held by vulnerable Republicans after the
vote.
It is also a marker
for how Democrats would address rising prescription drug prices if they were to
gain control of the White House and Congress. In addition, Democrats
are seeking to highlight Trump’s failure to deliver on his
2016 campaign promise to allow Medicare to “negotiate like crazy.”
The Democrats’
effort, which became broader as it made its way through committees, has spooked
the pharmaceutical industry, which is vehemently opposed to the legislation and
has said it would stifle innovation.
A Congressional
Budget Office estimate showed the bill, H.R. 3, named the Elijah E. Cummings
Lower Drug Costs Now Act after the late Democratic congressman, would save the
government $456 billion between 2020 and 2029, and result in eight fewer new
drugs coming to market over the next decade. Some Democrats have argued the
bill would simply result in fewer copycat versions of existing drugs, rather
than prevent development of new ones, but drug lobbyists argue the worst damage
would extend beyond the first decade of the law’s implementation.
“The American people
are fed up with paying three, four or 10 times more than people in other
countries for the exact same drug,” said Rep. Frank Pallone Jr. (D-N.J.),
chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee. “I now hope Senator McConnell
will follow through on President Trump’s repeated promises to ‘negotiate like
crazy’ and take up this bill. We cannot afford to wait.”
Trump’s advisers had been in
discussions with Pelosi’s staff for months over a possible deal, and
Trump’s embrace of traditionally
Democratic proposals to lower drug prices was a potential wild card
in the bill’s fate.
But Trump backed off
the House proposal in recent weeks, saying Congress should focus its efforts on
a bipartisan Senate Finance Committee
proposal from Chairman Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) and ranking Democrat
Ron Wyden (Ore.) that would cap price increases in Medicare to the rate of
inflation and limit seniors’ out-of-pocket costs. That bill is also unlikely to
be signed into law — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) told the
White House he is unwilling to bring up a bill that splits his caucus, and
several Republicans have said the measure is akin to imposing price controls,
which they have long opposed.
The House bill would
require the Health and Human Services secretary to negotiate the prices of up
to 250 drugs in Medicare each year that do not have competitors and would
impose severe financial penalties on drug companies that failed to come to an
agreement. The negotiated prices would be available to those covered by private
insurance, not just Medicare beneficiaries. The bill also establishes an
international pricing index that would ensure U.S. consumers do not pay more
than beneficiaries in other countries, where prices are often lower because
their governments negotiate prices. That is similar to a more limited proposal by the Trump administration that is making its
way through the rulemaking process but has been stalled amid
technical and regulatory issues and the president’s changing demands.
The CBO also found
that the House bill would lower health insurance costs for employers and
increase federal revenue by about $45 billion because employer insurance
premiums would decline, and those savings would manifest in increased taxable
wages.
Progressives had
threatened to derail the effort earlier this week over complaints that the bill
did not go far enough, but Pelosi managed to hold her party together.
Republicans railed against the bill, declaring it a socialist proposal that
would threaten innovation. Days ahead of Thursday’s vote, they introduced their
own drug pricing proposal, which Pelosi and Democrats dismissed as too
incremental.
“Our plan to lower out of pocket spending and
protect access to new medicines and cures is not controversial,” four top House
Republicans said in a statement. “The American people need relief and we ought
to deliver it
by moving forward with legislation that can actually be signed into law.”
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