WASHINGTONâ"President-elect Donald Trump has chosen House Budget Committee Chairman Tom Price (R., Ga.) as his nominee for secretary of the Health and Human Services Department, according to a transition team adviser, putting the six-term congressman in charge of the sprawling agency that will likely dismantle Democratsâ 2010 health-care overhaul.
Mr. Price, a 62-year-old former orthopedic surgeon, is one of several GOP physicians who sought to carve out a leading role in shaping the partyâs health policy and, in particular, the partyâs alternative vision to Democratsâ Affordable Care Act. Much of his criticism of the law has centered on the authority it gives to the federal government, and to the agency that he may now head.
âWe think itâs important that Washington not be in charge of health care,â he said in an interview this summer. âThe problem that I have with Obamacare is that its premise is that Washington knows best.â
He has championed his own legislation, the Empowering Patients First Act, since 2009, taking a position on a number of hot-button issues for conservative health policy thinkers. In its latest iteration, the proposal includes refundable, age-adjusted tax credits for people to buy insurance if they donât have access to coverage through an employer or government program. People in a government program, such as Medicare, Medicaid or Tricare, would also be allowed to opt out of it and get tax credits toward the cost of private coverage instead.
Mr. Price had previously included tax deductions in his plans, a tool typically favored by harder-line conservative health policy thinkers, but said he had âmoved towards credits because we felt it was cleaner.â
The plan offers a one-time credit aimed at boosting health savings accounts, long described by supporters as a way of bringing down medical spending, and derives part of its funding from capping how much employers can spend on providing employee health care before being taxed. The plan seeks to make health insurance available to individuals with pre-existing medical conditions by helping states set up new âhigh-riskâ pools or other programs for such enrollees, and sets new rules allowing insurers to sell policies across state lines.
But Mr. Price, whose rise in the congressional ranks began at the conservative Republican Study Committee and then steadily climbed, has already said he is open to compromise with fellow GOP lawmakers on many points.
âThereâs a genuine desire to have us coalesce around a single plan so that the American people can see whoâs trying to solve these challenges,â he said in June. âI wouldnât draw any lines in the sand other than that the path that weâre on doesnât work.â Soon after, House Speaker Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) announced that House Republicans led by Mr. Price and three other committee chairmen had reached agreement on a unified proposal, âA Better Way,â that included some of Mr. Priceâs ideas.
Mr. Price spent a 20-year medical career in Atlanta, where he also undertook his residency. He went into state politics when Republicans were still a minority in Georgia. After they took control, he became the first Republican Senate Majority Leader in the history of the state, he says in his official biography.
In the U.S. House, where he has served since 2005, Mr. Price has voted reliably against federal funding of abortion, and in opposition to federal requirements that insurance plans cover contraception without out-of-pocket costs as part of the Affordable Care Act.
As a Georgia state senator, Mr. Price had voted for a state requirement that insurance companies cover contraception in their prescription-drug plans. The difference, he said when asked about it in 2012, was Washington. âThe issue hereâ¦is whether or not the federal government ought to be deciding what health coverage is,â Mr. Price said.
If he is confirmed by the Senate, Mr. Priceâs duties will include overseeing a 78,000-employee department whose responsibilities go far beyond the Affordable Care Act. They include running the Medicare insurance program for the elderly, overseeing the Medicaid insurance program for low-income Americans, funding medical research at the National Institutes of Health, operating the Food and Drug Administration, and advocating for public health with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The repeal of the 2010 health law, long sought by Republicans, will likely fall to the White House and Mr. Priceâs GOP colleagues in Congress in the first instance. In their first days in office, Mr. Trump could take executive action to void parts of the law, destabilizing it. Congressional Republicans could then use their majorities in both chambers to strike larger swaths through budget moves.
The Department of Health and Human Services is likely to have an influential role over those strategic decisions, but its largest task will be in managing their repercussions and working with legislators seeking to enact alternative measures to replace the law.
â"Louise Radnofsky contributed to this article.
Write to Louise Radnofsky at louise.radnofsky@wsj.com and Peter Nicholas at peter.nicholas@wsj.com
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