WASHINGTON — Senate Democratic leaders won quick praise from seniors this week when they vowed to close the nettlesome coverage gap in Medicare’s prescription drug benefit.

U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman (Creative Commons photo by Truthout via Flickr)
“I am committed to fully closing it, once and for all,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.)
said Monday. “We will do so in our conference committee with the House, whose bill already closes the gap.”
Left unmentioned, however, was how they plan to pay for that promise without unraveling a friendly deal struck earlier in the year between the pharmaceutical lobby and Democratic leaders in the White House and Senate. Though the House bill does indeed close the coverage gap, known disapprovingly as the “doughnut hole,” lower-chamber leaders chose to offset that provision by allowing states to negotiate drug prices for millions of low-income seniors, which is prohibited under current law. Such negotiations would save the government tens of billions of dollars, but would also undermine the deal with Big Pharma.
Read more at Michigan Messenger’s sister site in the nation’s capital, The Washington Independent.