Monday, March 31, 2014

Camp won"t seek reelection

Dave Camp is shown. | Getty

Rep. Dave Camp was first elected in 1990. | Getty





Michigan Rep. Dave Camp, the chairman of the prestigious Ways and Means Committee, will not run for reelection in November, according to multiple Republican sources.


Camp was first elected in 1990, in a class that also included Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio).







“Serving in Congress is the great honor of my professional life,” Camp said in a statement released by the Ways and Means Committee. “I am deeply grateful to the people of the 4th Congressional District for placing their trust in me. Over the years, their unwavering support has been a source of strength, purpose and inspiration.”


(PHOTOS: Who’s leaving Congress?)


Camp said he will spend the remainder of this 113th Congress on efforts to “grow our economy and expand opportunity for every American by fixing our broken tax code, permanently solving physician payments for seniors, strengthening the social safety net and finding new markets for U.S. goods and services.”


The retirement was widely expected on Capitol Hill. Over the last few weeks, senior Republican officials were skeptical Camp would run for re-election.


After this Congress, term limits would prohibit Camp from serving another two years as chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. Without special dispensation from Boehner, the Michigan Republican would go back to being in the rank-and-file — a rough assignment for a veteran like Camp.


In Michigan, candidates must file for reelection by April 22 and Camp had not yet filed.


Camp is hardly the only veteran lawmaker in either party to announce his retirement this year.


He is the 23rd House lawmaker to announce they will leave this Congress. Other prominent Republicans calling it quits include Natural Resources Chairman Doc Hastings of Washington state, Armed Services Chairman Buck McKeon of California and Intelligence Chairman Mike Rogers of Michigan. Senior Democrats forgoing reelection include Reps. Henry Waxman and George Miller of California and John Dingell of Michigan.


(PHOTOS: 10 must-watch House races in 2014)


Camp is the third veteran Michigander to forgo reelection this year. Dingell and Rogers are both from his home state.


As the Ways and Means Committee chairman, Camp found himself at the center of much of the fiscal drama on Capitol Hill over the past few years. He was a member of the supercommittee and was involved in the debate over extending a controversial payroll tax cut and averting the 2012 fiscal cliff.


But tax reform – the goal of every modern day Ways and Means Chairman – eluded Camp.


Throughout the fiscal battles of the last few years, there was hope that Congress would work with President Barack Obama to overhaul the code. Camp has worked behind the scenes to lay the groundwork for a rewrite of the tax code, but to no avail. Earlier this year, he released a draft tax reform bill that ran into resistance from multiple corners of the House Republican Conference.


In 2012, Camp was diagnosed with non-Hodgkins large B-cell lymphoma. Doctors declared him cancer free later that year.


Republicans will be favored to retain Camp’s central Michigan seat, which GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney carried in 2012 with 53 percent of the vote. The district voted for Barack Obama in 2008 with 50 percent of the vote.


Democratic Congressional Committee Chairman Steve Israel said Monday that he viewed the district as within Democrats’ reach.


“Voters in Michigan’s fourth district have a history of backing members of both parties, supporting President Obama in 2008, and their hunger for an agenda that strengthens the middle class will make this district competitive,” he said in a statement.


Possible Republican replacements for Camp, according to a GOP source familiar with Michigan politics, include state Sen. John Moolenaar R-Midland and Peter Konetchy, a Roscommon businessman who announced last year that he would challenge Camp.


“Obviously I’m very pleased that he’s not seeking re-election. It’s very very good news. I think it’ll be very positive for me so I am very grateful for it,” Konetchy told POLITICO. “I always thought that he would retire because he’s retiring from the House Ways and Means Chairmanship and that’s kind of a big blow…I was surprised he didn’t announce it earlier.”


Camp won reelection in 2012 with 63 percent of the vote. He was unopposed in the GOP primary.


Juana Summers contributed to this report.




POLITICO – Congress



Camp won"t seek reelection

Deadline dash: Glitches slow health care sign-ups







People line up to enroll for health insurance at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas on Monday, March 31, 2014. The deadline is just hours away to sign up for insurance in the first enrollment period under President Barack Obama’s signature health care law. (AP Photo/San Antonio Express-News, Jerry Lara) RUMBO DE SAN ANTONIO OUT; NO SALES





People line up to enroll for health insurance at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas on Monday, March 31, 2014. The deadline is just hours away to sign up for insurance in the first enrollment period under President Barack Obama’s signature health care law. (AP Photo/San Antonio Express-News, Jerry Lara) RUMBO DE SAN ANTONIO OUT; NO SALES





Charles Ellis, 53, of Salt Lake City, right, works with navigator Luis Rios while seeking help to buy health insurance at the Utah Health Policy Project Monday, March 31, 2014, in Salt Lake City. Ellis said he doesn’t feel he needs insurance but was signing up to avoid a penalty. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)





SEIU-UHW worker Kathy Santana, left , assists Ruben Tares, 27, during a health care enrollment event at SEIU-UHW office, Monday, March 31, 2014, in Commerce, Calif. Monday marks this year’s open enrollment deadline, but consumers will get extra time to finish their applications. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)





Lisa Valera and her husband Manuel sign up for Obamacare at the Community Service Society, Monday, March 31, 2014 in New York. The troubled U.S. government web site for signing up for health insurance was unavailable for several hours Monday morning as the midnight deadline for buying coverage loomed. Heading into the deadline, more than 6 million Americans had signed up for health insurance, some of the policies heavily subsidized for lower income people. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)





A screen shows the countdown for the deadline to sign up for health insurance during a health care enrollment event at SEIU-UHW office, Monday, March 31, 2014, in Commerce, Calif. Monday marks this year’s open enrollment deadline, but consumers will get extra time to finish their applications. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)













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WASHINGTON (AP) — In a flood of last-minute sign-ups, hundreds of thousands of Americans rushed to apply for health insurance Monday, but deadline day for President Barack Obama’s overhaul brought long, frustrating waits and a new spate of website ills.


“This is like trying to find a parking spot at Wal-Mart on Dec. 23,” said Jason Stevenson, working with a Utah nonprofit group helping people enroll.


At times, more than 125,000 people were simultaneously using HealthCare.gov, straining it beyond its capacity. For long stretches Monday, applicants were shuttled to a virtual waiting room where they could leave an email address and be contacted later.


Officials said the site had not crashed but was experiencing very heavy volume. The website, which was receiving 1.5 million visitors a day last week, had recorded about 1.6 million through 2 p.m. EDT.


Supporters of the health care law fanned out across the country in a final dash to sign up uninsured Americans. People not signed up for health insurance by the deadline, either through their jobs or on their own, were subject to being fined by the IRS, and that threat was helping drive the final dash.


The administration announced last week that people still in line by midnight would get extra time to enroll.


The website stumbled early in the day — out of service for nearly four hours as technicians patched a software bug. Another hiccup in early afternoon temporarily kept new applicants from signing up, and then things slowed further. Overwhelmed by computer problems when launched last fall, the system has been working much better in recent months, but independent testers say it still runs slowly.


At Chicago’s Norwegian American Hospital, people began lining up shortly after 7 a.m. to get help signing up for subsidized private health insurance.


Lucy Martinez, an unemployed single mother of two boys, said she’d previously tried to enroll at a clinic in another part of the city but there was always a problem. She’d wait and wait and they wouldn’t call her name, or they would ask her for paperwork that she was told earlier she didn’t need, she said. Her diabetic mother would start sweating so they’d have to leave.


She’s heard “that this would be better here,” said Martinez, adding that her mother successfully signed up Sunday at a different location.


At St. Francis Hospital in Wilmington, Del., enrollment counselor Hubert Worthen plunged into a long day. “I got my energy drink,” he said. “This is epic, man.”


At a Houston community center, there were immigrants from Ethiopia, Nepal, Eritrea, Somalia, Iraq, Iran and other conflict-torn areas, many of them trying anew after failing to complete applications previously. In addition to needing help with the actual enrollment, they needed to wait for interpreters. Many had taken a day off from work, hoping to meet the deadline.


The White House and other supporters of the law were hoping for an enrollment surge that would push sign-ups in the new health insurance markets to around 6.5 million people. That’s halfway between a revised goal of 6 million and the original target of 7 million. The first goal was scaled back after the federal website’s disastrous launch last fall, which kept it offline during most of October.


The insurance markets — or exchanges — offer subsidized private health insurance to people who don’t have access to coverage through their jobs. The federal government is taking the lead in 36 states, while 14 other states plus Washington, D.C., are running their own enrollment websites.


New York, running its own site, reported more than 812,000 had signed up by Sunday morning, nearly 100,000 of them last week.


However, it’s unclear what those numbers may mean.


The administration hasn’t said how many of the 6 million people nationally who had signed up before the weekend ultimately closed the deal by paying their first month’s premiums. Also unknown is how many were previously uninsured — the real test of Obama’s health care overhaul. In addition, the law expands coverage for low-income people through Medicaid, but only about half the states have agreed to implement that option.


Cheering on the deadline-day sign-up effort, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius planned to spend much of the day Monday working out of the department’s TV studio, conducting interviews by satellite with stations around the country.


Though March 31 was the last day officially to sign up, millions of people are potentially eligible for extensions granted by the administration.


Those include people who had begun enrolling by the deadline but didn’t finish, perhaps because of errors, missing information or website glitches. The government says it will accept paper applications until April 7 and take as much time as necessary to handle unfinished cases on HealthCare.gov. Rules may vary in states running their own insurance marketplaces.


The administration is also offering special extensions to make up for all sorts of problems that might have kept people from getting enrolled on time: Natural disasters. Domestic abuse. Website malfunctions. Errors by insurance companies. Mistakes by application counselors.


To seek a special enrollment period, contact the federal call center, at 1-855-889-4325, or the state marketplace and explain what happened. It’s on the honor system. If the extension is approved, that brings another 60 days to enroll.


Those who still don’t get health insurance run the risk that the Internal Revenue Service will fine them next year for remaining uninsured. It remains to be seen how aggressively the penalties called for in the law are enforced.


Also, the new markets don’t have a monopoly on health insurance. People not already covered by an employer or a government program can comply with the insurance mandate by buying a policy directly from an insurer. They’ll just have to pay the full premium themselves, although in a few states there may be an exception to that rule as well.


Supporters of the law held their breath early Monday when the website was taken down.


Administration spokesman Aaron Albright said the site undergoes “regular nightly maintenance” during off-peak hours and the period was extended because of a “technical problem.” He did not say what the problem was, but an official statement called it “a software bug” unrelated to application volume.


In Oakton, Va., enrollment counselor Rachel Klein said she noticed the website was running slowly.


“We all came into it understanding that today was going to be challenging,” said Klein. “We’re all relieved that there’s going to be a little extra time for people.”


House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio said Monday that Republicans remain committed to repealing Obama’s law. But its supporters are wasting no time trying to shape the next open enrollment season, starting Nov. 15. The advocacy group Families USA will announce ten recommendations Tuesday to make the system more consumer-friendly.


They range from providing more in-person assistance with sign-ups, to eliminating premium penalties for smokers, to aligning enrollment with tax-filing season.


___


Associated Press writers Connie Cass in Washington, Don Babwin in Chicago, Randall Chase in Wilmington, Del., Ramit Plushnick-Masti in Houston, Michelle Price in Salt Lake City and Carolyn Thompson in Buffalo, N.Y., contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Deadline dash: Glitches slow health care sign-ups

Carney: "We"re Talking About Private Insurance, This Is Not A Government Program"





JON KARL, ABC NEWS: How many of the 6 million who have signed up, how many of those who have signed up actually paid?


CARNEY: We don’t have those figures. When we do, we’ll give them to you. As you know, and I think it’s very important, and I look forward to everybody making this clear in their reports, we’re talking about private insurance. This is not a government program.


The contract that you sign if you get health insurance through Healthcare.gov or through a state marketplace is a private contract between you and an insurance company.




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Carney: "We"re Talking About Private Insurance, This Is Not A Government Program"

Leaked Senate Report Shows Use of Torture As "Ineffective"

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Leaked Senate Report Shows Use of Torture As "Ineffective"

Congress Approves Bill to Avert Medicare Pay Cut for Doctors


The U.S. Senate gave final congressional approval on Monday to legislation to avert a pay cut for doctors who participate in the Medicare insurance program for the elderly and disabled.


By a vote of 64-35, the Democratic-led Senate sent the measure, approved last week by the Republican-led House of Representatives, to President Barack Obama to sign into law.


The bill would give doctors a one-year reprieve from a 24 percent cut set to kick in this week under the Medicare payment formula, known as the Sustainable Growth Rate, or SGR.


It marked the 17th time Congress had agreed to a temporary “doc fix” rather than agreeing to a permanent bipartisan replacement of the 1997 funding formula.


The payments affect doctors treating patients under Medicare, which pays for healthcare for nearly 51 million people in the United States who are 65 and older or disabled.


Republican and Democratic lawmakers approved the “doc fix,” knowing that failure to do so would risk prompting doctors to drop out of the program, leaving patients without care.


© 2014 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



Congress Approves Bill to Avert Medicare Pay Cut for Doctors

"I Would Have Painted the Walls With My Blood"


The knock on the door came just before 6pm last Saturday. Tom and Jane Hollinghurst and their younger daughter Hannah, 11, were sitting beside the swimming pool behind their home.


It was the kind of balmy Florida evening that the British couple had grown used to in the six years since they emigrated from Derbyshire. The sprinkler system was spreading waves of mist over the lawn. Nothing could have prepared them for what they were about to learn.


Jane Hollinghurst answered the door. When the two uniformed officers asked her to confirm her name, she summoned her husband.


“I have to inform you of some terrible news,” said Deputy Jason Platt. “Your daughter Alexandria was involved in a shooting incident in the early hours of this morning. I’m sorry to tell you that she, Brandon Goode and a police officer were found deceased.”


Alex, as she was known, was 17 and had been counting the days to her 18th birthday and adulthood. A petite blonde with blue-green eyes and an academic record that guaranteed her a good university place, she was popular at the local high school in Davenport, near Disney World, where she had worked part-time.


The boys who tried to go out with her had soon realised that she was interested only in her boyfriend, Brandon, an intense youth with slicked-back hair who had just turned 18. To the dismay of Alex’s parents, the couple had become almost inseparable over the previous three years.


“He was a super smart kid,” said Dominic Russo, who had known Brandon since they were both 10. “He’d come in with a new dress shirt and tie on every day. I guess he wanted to be GQ. High-end clothes. Different.”


Last month, Brandon and Alex were stopped by police in his silver Isuzu Rodeo and arrested after glass pipes and cannabis were found. Brandon was held in jail overnight and Alex taken to a juvenile assessment centre. They were due to appear in court last week. After yet another ugly row with her mother — there had been so many about sex or alcohol or drugs — Alex was forced to hand her mobile phone to her parents.


Unbeknown to the Hollinghursts, it was not Brandon’s first arrest. Less than two years earlier, his mother Connie had walked into the living room to find Brandon, his head shaven, sitting on the couch. Blankets had been used to cover some of the windows.


As she approached him, Brandon turned around. His face was covered in black paint and he had an axe. Brandon jumped up and pinned her to the wall, demanding that she accept a divorce settlement from his father.


But Sheriff Grady Judd, trying to make sense of events last weekend declined to portray Brandon as anything like the character played by Woody Harrelson in the film Natural Born Killers, where a psychopathic couple embark on a spree of mayhem and murder.


“He wasn’t a thug,” the sheriff said. “I consider him a child in search of direction in life. The incident with the axe was a divorce thing. He violated the law by being in possession of marijuana but he was not, by any stretch of the imagination, the criminal type that we see so often. This just does not fit the mould.”


THE Hollinghurst family emigrated to the US when Alex was 11. Andrew Cartledge, her primary school headmaster in Hadfield, Derbyshire, remembered “a great child” with an infectious smile. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



"I Would Have Painted the Walls With My Blood"

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Christian "Lifestyle Statement" Leads To Mass Resignations At University

"Noah" vs. "God"s Not Dead" Highlights Hollywood"s Culture War Advantage

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"Noah" vs. "God"s Not Dead" Highlights Hollywood"s Culture War Advantage

Anonymous Barack Obama, Do You See What We See

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Anonymous Barack Obama, Do You See What We See

This High-Speed Boating Track is Absolutely Nuts

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This High-Speed Boating Track is Absolutely Nuts

South and North Korea exchange fire as tensions rise with US Marines exercise

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South and North Korea exchange fire as tensions rise with US Marines exercise

Ukrainian women get their guns ready for Putin, with a song

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Ukrainian women get their guns ready for Putin, with a song

7 Of The Worst Choices Ever Made While High


  • News


7 Of The Worst Choices Ever Made While High

Someone once told me drugs are bad. I think it was a man dressed like a dog, or a cartoon rabbit or something. I’ve taken that lesson to heart and only do molly after promising this will be the last time. Every time.


While we’ve all heard hilarious tales of bath salts zombies and heroin-addled buggerists, those are lame and predictable and somewhat depressing drug hijinks. Don’t people do hilariously misguided things when they’re high anymore? Aren’t there any stories that could serve as awesome subplots in a carefree ’80s sex comedy? Yes! Read some hysterical stories on Cracked…





The FriskyThe Frisky



7 Of The Worst Choices Ever Made While High

Faster!

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Faster!

Here Come The Feds: FBI Probing HFT

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Here Come The Feds: FBI Probing HFT

Microsoft Azure Matches Amazon’s Price Cuts And Introduces New “Basic” Tier

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Microsoft Azure Matches Amazon’s Price Cuts And Introduces New “Basic” Tier

SOTT FOCUS: "Raw meat could be the cause of dead dogs!" - Seriously?!?

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SOTT FOCUS: "Raw meat could be the cause of dead dogs!" - Seriously?!?

Tegan and Sara celebrate LGBTQ activism at Junos

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Tegan and Sara celebrate LGBTQ activism at Junos

Top 3 Ridiculous Animals of the Week | NewsLook

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Top 3 Ridiculous Animals of the Week | NewsLook

Triple A sovereign ratings deposed...

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Triple A sovereign ratings deposed...