Can you imagine the reaction if a Republican had tried this?
Top aides to Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) called a last-minute, pre-emptive strike on Wednesday with a group of prominent Democratic lobbyists, warning them to advise their clients not to attend a meeting with Senate Republicans set for Thursday.
Russell Sullivan, the top staffer on Finance, and Jon Selib, Baucus’ chief of staff, met with a bloc of more than 20 contract lobbyists, including several former Baucus aides.
“They said, ‘Republicans are having this meeting and you need to let all of your clients know if they have someone there, that will be viewed as a hostile act,’” said a Democratic lobbyist who attended the meeting.
“Going to the Republican meeting will say, ‘I’m interested in working with Republicans to stop health care reform,’” the lobbyist added…
Senate Republicans are opposed to plans by President Barack Obama and Congressional Democrats to implement a government-run, public plan option as a part of health care reform. They also are concerned with how Democrats plan to pay for reform.
Recognizing they don’t have the votes to stop legislation on their own, Republicans are pushing their natural allies in the business community to help bring public pressure to bear as another way to influence the outcome.
Obama has set Oct. 15 as the deadline for approval of health care reform, and Democratic leaders in Congress are rushing to clear bills from their respective chambers by the end of July.
“Our effort has been to get these folks to speak their mind,” one senior Senate Republican aide said…
But with Baucus’ office still warning dissenters that anyone who makes their opposition public could be permanently excluded from future negotiations, the groups representing businesses, health care providers, hospitals and similar stakeholders are still wavering on whether to voice their concerns publicly.
The lineup of lobbyists who attended the Wednesday session included a cast of Democratic insiders similar to that at previous meetings convened by Baucus’ staff. The participants included: Jeff Forbes, a former Baucus chief of staff who lobbies at Cauthen Forbes & Williams; Jonathon Jones, a partner with Peck, Madigan, Jones & Stewart; Tarplin Strategies’ Rich Tarplin, an assistant secretary at Health and Human Services in the Clinton administration; another former Baucus top aide, David Castagnetti, of Mehlman Vogel Castagnetti and OB-C Group founder Larry O’Brien.
The lobbyists represented at this meeting undoubtedly represent all sorts of health care stakeholders: hospitals, doctors, nurses, insurance companies, etc. The unmistakable message from Baucus is that those who don’t roll over and make a deal will wind up getting raked over the coals. Democrats railed for years about the purported heavy hand of hardball politicians like Tom DeLay, but they never resorted to blackmail.
Where is the mainstream media on this?


Comments (8)
Or this,,Automatic pay raises for congress?
check out this ,,,
http://stoppayraisesforcongress.davidvitter.com/?msource=DV061109&tr=y&auid=4960621
when republicans get back in power i will fully support then decimating all democrat supported business and giving it to republicans.
Republicans do that all the time. So what?
They don't do it after a very public statement to US that they'd be bi-partisan in solving todays countrywide problems.So they lied.I just call them on it.
would be intereseting to get rid of representative government..
rejean: every re-pubic pres candidate since I can remember promised to be (in George W's words) "a uniter not a divider"
All politicians do the bi-partisan song and dance until they get into office and are faced by the reality of deeply entrenched bi-partisanism.
I for one am glad that our two parties bicker and oppose one another. I think its healthy and keeps both parties from reaching their logical extremes.
bickering is good,denying ANY input is not.What about all the rhetoric of bi-partisanship?
Buacus' awrning that anyone dissenting in public could be permenantly excluded from future negotiations.That is not a representative form of government.
Republican or Democrat, there is very little difference between these two parties. Look at Obama, he is more republican than democrat in my opinion. Obama is following Bush Jr’s presidential playbook, such as keeping both wars going, rendition, no habeas corpus rights for detainees, banker bailouts (started under Bush), domestic spy program (being expanded under cybersecurity act), censorship via copy write overreaction, and torture.
Paper Ballot Requirement in all Fifty States. Link: http://opengov.ideascale.com/akira/dtd/4137-4049
Free Media Election Time. Link: http://opengov.ideascale.com/akira/dtd/4136-4049
Congressional Term Limits. Link: http://opengov.ideascale.com/akira/dtd/4141-4049
Presidential Term Limits. Link: http://opengov.ideascale.com/akira/dtd/4140-4049