Breaux: Bipartisanship Necessary To Fix Medicare Finances
Louisiana Democrat left the Senate seven years ago, but old habits die hard.Ā Today heĀ fell back easily into his formerĀ role of compromise builder as he stressed the need for political common ground to overhaul Medicare next year.

After a hearing to delve intoĀ āpremium supportā models, Breaux held court with reporters and concluded that his own blueprint from 1999 might just do the trick. āI didnāt realize how good it was until I was out of Congress,ā he quipped.
Joking aside, Breaux, who is now senior counsel at the law firmĀ Patton Boggs, argued that bipartisanship would be necessary to enact any major Medicare bill next year and that it would start in the politicalĀ center. But heĀ also insisted that this yearās retirement of Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, wouldĀ not totally empty the Senate of moderates. He specifically named Finance Committee Chairman, D-Mont., and ranking Republican , R-Utah, āafter the election,ā as senators who could potentially start a movement working from the middle. Hatch is facing a tough re-election battle, including a .
The key, BreauxĀ said, is to change the way that health care is delivered in Medicare, to make it more efficient, and then have private health plans and the traditional, government-run program compete, withĀ Ā federal premium assistance tied to the growth of health care costs, which, he said, would decline over time under a premium support model.
This approach, he said, would makeĀ Medicare more like the health care program for federal employees. Beneficiaries would get subsidies from the federal government to join a private or government-run health plan. Indeed, he cited the federal employee plan and Medicareās prescription drug program as examples of premium support models that work.
The major premium support proposal under discussion right now is from , R-Wis. Democrats ā and one Republican at todayās hearing ā expressed concern about Ryanās linking of the growth of premium assistance to the overall growth of the economy, which historically has increased at a slower pace than health care costs. Because federal spending would be limited, additional costs would likely be borne by Medicare beneficiaries, critics of the Ryan plan say.
Breaux said that Ryanās plan was a good start, but sharedĀ Democratsā concerns that federal premium help would be insufficient for seniors. He made the case together with then-Senate Republican Leader in the 1990’s would not shift costs to seniors and could lower overall Medicare costs 12 percent. Those were his own estimates, which he based on greater efficiency from competition between plans and organizing care better.
āThe debate should be about a better delivery system that has benefits for seniors,ā he said. āItās not about changing Medicare. Itās about changing the way we give it to people.ā