Tag Archives: democratic

Hardball: Democrat using DMR investigation against GOP opponent in Ocean Springs mayors race.


During an April 16 press conference in Biloxi, (Auditor Stacey) Pickering responded to a question about public officials using the Dept. of Marine Resources boats at taxpayer cost. At the time, Pickering said if any public officials were found to have “violated the public trust, they will be held accountable.”

(Ocean Springs mayoral candidate John) McKay told The Mississippi Press that same day he was upset with Pickering’s statement and was innocent of any wrongdoing, suggesting he and others had been mislead by Walker.

“We stood by a mud hole and we got splattered,” he said at the time and has repeated several times since.

It was later learned the person who asked Pickering the question during the news conference was a campaign worker of Mckay’s opponent, incumbent Democrat Mayor Connie Moran.

McKay alluded to that fact in his press release last week, stating “This was a phony issue to begin with started by an employee of Mayor Moran’s campaign…”

Monday, (Pickering spokesman Brett) Kittredge gave no indication that any statement from Pickering would be forthcoming prior to the June 4 election.

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Filed under Connie Moran, Democrats, Elections, Ethics, Gulf Coast, Mississippi, Mississippi Municipalities, Politics, Republican, Stacey Pickering, State Government

Plunkett: Media attempting to ride to rescue of Mississippi Democrats with new Medicaid narrative.


BY: B. Keith Plunkett @Keithplunkett
Democrats have been flailing around looking for any and every reason to remain relevant in a Medicaid debate that, except for their obstructionism in the Mississippi House, passed them by weeks ago.

House Democrat leader Rep. Bobby Moak’s latest attempts, with the help of long time Representative Cecil Brown, has been to paint Medicaid expansion as a jobs program. It’s the latest argument in an ever-changing and undisciplined message from Democrats.  Before, it was about rural hospitals closing due to the loss of federal money, and before that it was about hospitals losing their good credit ratings. Both of the latter arguments have been disproven. The argument as it relates to job creation is, at best, speculative.

Besides attempts during the legislative session to organize rallies in conjunction with the Mississippi Hospital Association to support expansion of the program–a strategy that did little more than trot out examples of the very reason the Medicaid program is in the terrible shape it is in–there has been nothing consistent about the Democrats message. Chairman of the Democrat Party Rickey Cole hasn’t been seen publicly commenting on it in over a month.

But, never fear. The cavalry is coming.

Two analysis articles written by the Associated Press and another by the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal are attempting to give Dems a hand in rewriting the script with a “one-two punch”.

The AP analysis attempts to recognize a tremor in the political steadiness of Republicans. The Daily Journal editorial tries to help the Democrats refocus the argument on the wretched plight of the impoverished masses.

Back in 2006, the AP welcomed a new director who made it perfectly clear that in order to compete, the news organization would have to be more of an advocate for causes. This latest article appears to fit well within that organizational reboot.

In short, the AP analysis tries its dead-level best to show that Governor Phil Bryant’s latest comments, that he would attempt to run the Medicaid program, is a crack in the Republican foundations, an example of “veering from the script.”

The AP analysis said:

Beyond the cloudy legality of the Republican’s claim, it turns away from the clear-as-glass GOP strategy of blaming Democrats for voting against the program and causing a calamity where 640,000 Mississippians wouldn’t have health care coverage come July 1.

Those GOP positions, repeated over the last two months, appeared aimed at ratcheting up pressure on members of the House Democratic minority. The idea is that some would give in and vote to reauthorize the state-federal health insurance program for the poor without insisting on expanding Medicaid to cover additional people. The plan appeared to be to build the pressure into June and then for Bryant to call lawmakers back for a special session, with the threat of the program’s imminent collapse teetering over Democrats’ heads.

But if it’s Bryant’s position that he can keep Medicaid going even if the Legislature doesn’t act, why say it out loud? It’s likely to encourage some Democrats to keep fighting.

There’s a couple of problems with the AP’s attempt at encouraging the Democrats to continue this political game: Democrats DID vote against reauthorizing the program. And, this WILL be a calamity for the 641,194 needy Mississippians who now rely on Medicaid.

A precursory read of Governor Bryant’s comments show a man frustrated with those two facts, and one who cares about the elderly and disabled who the Democrats are willing to “toss out in the street.”

The man said he cares enough to do everything he can and that is a political weakness? Sorry, that boat doesn’t float.

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The Daily Journal editorial attempts to pick up the other side of the argument; that no one is speaking for the people who need Medicaid.

They write the following:

So far, little has been said about the consequences for the program’s 640,000 current clients.

Politics so far trumps patients – those 640,000 people who are primarily the disabled, poor pregnant women, poor children and the elderly.

The additional 300,000 who would be eligible under expanded coverage aren’t in the equation except as a footnote about uncompensated care provided by hospitals already hard-pressed to stay financially afloat.

That is a complete fabrication, and the Editorial Board at the Daily Journal knows it. The Governor’s office released a well-publicized list of the services that would end for Medicaid patients come July 1, and has clearly discussed with the media that the needs of those currently on the program should come first.

Finally, the Daily Journal pushes another fallacy on it’s readers. The opinion of the Editorial Board is that if it weren’t for the hard headedness of Gov. Bryant there COULD be a compromise in Mississippi along the lines of the Arkansas’ model.

In that instance, the Governor of Arkansas cut a deal with the US Dept. of Health and Human Services Director Kathleen Sebelius to take the Medicaid expansion money and apply it to private insurance through a state-run insurance exchange.

The Daily Journal Editorial board says:

Mississippi has a health insurance exchange constructed and ready to be implemented, but Gov. Bryant, in a disagreement with statewide elected Insurance Commissioner Mike Chaney, refused to take the necessary steps, and the federal Department of Health and Human Services disallowed the exchange.

Chaney moved to create the state exchange on the premise that it would be better for the state to run its own exchange than to have the federal government do it for us.

There’s been no compelling argument to the contrary; Bryant’s decision was clearly political.

Again, that’s a load of crap.

There are plenty of compelling reasons not to have a state-based health exchange under ObamaCare, but the main one is the job-killing taxation that only comes with a state-based exchange. The IRS ruled that it could tax companies and implement the individual mandate regardless of whether there was a federal exchange or a state exchange. But, that is outside of the way ObamaCare was written and a lawsuit filed in Oklahoma last week is meant to get to the bottom of it.

In December of 2012, Commissioner Chaney heatedly debated some of these finer points with me on a statewide radio telling me I was wrong because “the IRS already ruled on that.”

But, the lawsuit clearly shows this is not settled, and much of the wheeling-and-dealing of the Obama Administration to arm twist states into expanding Medicaid may in fact turn out to be completely unenforceable and unworkable.

The ObamaCare law, and the Medicaid expansion that is a foundational piece of it’s implementation, is unsettled. Until the time that we can know for sure whether the federal government has the constitutional authority to cut DSH payments to hospitals, for example; or if the IRS rulings will stand up to the latest lawsuit over whether they now have carte-blanche authority to make law and tax individuals without prior approval of Congress, there simply is no reason to move ahead with this liberal experiment.

In the meantime, Mississippi Medicaid patients are about to lose services. That is the one thing Mississippi has control over right now, and where the focus of lawmakers should be.

About Keith: Keith Plunkett has worked on communications issues with a range of public officials from aldermen to Congressmen, and a variety of businesses, governmental agencies and non-profits. He serves or has served as a board member of several non-profit, civic and political organizations. Contact him by going to HorizonMediaMarketing.com or follow him on Twitter @Keithplunkett

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Filed under Cecil Brown, contributor, Democrats, Entitlements, Ethics, Federal Government, Governor, health, Insurance, Keith Plunkett, Legislature, Medicaid, Mike Chaney, Mississippi, Mississippi State House, Obamacare, Opinion, Phil Bryant, Politics, Republican, State Government

Pender: Gov. taking Medicaid message to the streets.


Gov. Phil Bryant on Tuesday was in Brookhaven, touring a nursing home, pleading his case on Medicaid with workers and patients — something he plans to do across the state in the next few weeks.

Taking it outside the capital and to the streets — that’s a political move out of former Gov. Haley Barbour’s handbook. It’s notable that the first stop on his Medicaid Mystery Tour was in the backyard of House Democratic Minority Leader Bobby Moak, his chief opponent in the Medicaid standoff.

But Medicaid expansion opponents are doing the same thing, with a “Bridging the Gap Statewide Listening Tour” recently kicked off in Hattiesburg and headed to Tupelo and Oxford.

Bryant is also saying that if lawmakers can’t reach agreement and reauthorize the Medicaid program — without expanding it — by July 1, then he’ll try to run it by executive order, something Democrats have said for months he cannot legally do, since the Legislature hasn’t reauthorized or funded the program for the coming year. Expect litigation, if that comes to pass.

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Filed under Democrats, Entitlements, Governor, Haley Barbour, health, Legislature, Medicaid, Mississippi, Mississippi State House, Obamacare, Opinion, Phil Bryant, Politics, Republican, State Government

Gov. Bryant says he’ll run Medicaid if Dems don’t agree to reauthorization.


Gov. Phil Bryant said if there is no agreement on Medicaid by July 1 he will try to run the agency without a legislative appropriation or reauthorization, and, essentially, dared anyone to take him to court to stop him.

“As head of the Governor’s Division of Medicaid, I will do all I can to continue and to provide Medicaid to the citizens who qualify in the state of Mississippi,” the first-term Republican said Wednesday after a tourism event at the Capitol. “That is my legal argument. If someone wants to challenge me in court, what is their argument?”

Bryant said he had an obligation to ensure the thousands of elderly residents on Medicaid in nursing homes are not “thrown out on the street.”

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Filed under Democrats, Entitlements, Ethics, Federal Government, Governor, health, Legislature, Medicaid, Mississippi, Phil Bryant, Politics, Public Service, Republican, State Government

Plunkett: Another nail in the Medicaid expansion coffin.


BY: B. Keith Plunkett @Keithplunkett
Democrats and left-leaning groups have continued to push the expansion of Medicaid in Mississippi over the past few weeks.

A group calling itself the Mississippi Health Care Access Coalition has been touring the state using the same set of numbers released a year ago. They also say expansion will promote preventative care and create savings by reducing emergency room visits. That explanation, like many that continue to be promoted, has also been debunked by a study released this week.

Rep. Cecil Brown wrote an Op-Ed in support of expansion that went out to news outlets across the state last week. He used the recent passage of the incentive package to bring Yokahama Tire to Clay County as a comparison to incentivizing the creation of jobs in the medical industry by expanding Medicaid.

Out of all the explanations I have heard given by Democrats for expanding the program, I believe Rep. Brown’s has been the most well-thought out and presented so far. However, he still relies on an “apples-to-oranges” comparison of 2 industries that work nothing alike. Beyond the comparison of the dollar to dollar investment by the state, the government regulations and the return on investment are completely different.

There are plenty of conservatives out there who aren’t too happy about the Yokahama tax incentive plan and the state investment in a private enterprise. But, at least that offers a return from the private generation of wealth from creation of goods and provision of services.

Creating 9,000 jobs by expanding Medicaid, if that number is anywhere near correct, is still creating 9,000 jobs DIRECTLY dependent upon government continuing to subsidize.

State government investment in federal government subsidies that creates more government and more subsidy doesn’t create anything but more dependence. Where in that scenario does private investment begin to spin off and take up the slack? I think we all know history shows us that it doesn’t.

The expansion proponents rely on two basic arguments:

  1. The federal government will cut DSH payments to hospitals meaning hospitals in Mississippi who rely on federal dollars will have to close. This has already been revealed to be a bogus argument, and we have seen hospitals back away publicly from promoting it. I won’t go into it any further here, but you can read more HERE.
  2. Medicaid expansion will increase healthier lives through preventative care and therefore healthier outcomes for the working uninsured who now must rely on services via emergency room visits when they are sick.

As I have written before, there are many studies that show the actual physical outcomes of traditional Medicaid patients fall short of even those who have NO insurance.(Again, not going into that here, but you can read more HERE.)

Medicaid is a program with terrible health outcomes for those who are on the program now. Unfortunately, that still doesn’t clearly tell us how the expansion of the program would fare among those who are currently in relatively good health and “work but can’t afford health insurance.”

Like Rep. Brown’s investment argument, that too wasn’t a clear comparison. How will outcomes change as a result of a healthier group of people receiving benefits and therefore leading healthier lifestyles and participating in preventative care? We could only look to the outcomes the program has produced so far, from the sickest of the sick.

Until Now.

Now we do have just such a comparison. And, it proves once again that the basic arguments for expansion don’t stand up in the real world.

Oregon has been sited by some as an example of what Medicaid expansion would look like, and how wonderful it would be. The state expanded it’s program through a federal pilot project in 2008. The participants in the expansion were drawn from a lottery of working poor applicants. A health study group was formed to analyze the data of 6387 adults who were randomly selected to be able to apply for Medicaid coverage and 5842 adults who remained uninsured.

Measures included blood-pressure, cholesterol, and glycated hemoglobin levels; screening for depression; medication inventories; and self-reported diagnoses, health status, health care utilization, and out-of-pocket spending for such services.

The Results of the Study Don’t Look So Good.

The results of the study were released last week. It found no significant effect of Medicaid coverage on the prevalence or diagnosis of hypertension or high cholesterol levels or on the use of medication for these conditions.

The Oregon Health Study Group’s conclusion published in the New England Journal of Medicine was that the study showed that Medicaid coverage generated no significant improvements in measured physical health outcomes, and no measurable decrease in emergency room visits.

Hello?! Isn’t that what every study has told us over the past two decades?

The use of the services by new enrollees and the costs to the taxpayers providing those services increased. As did the mental well-being of the new enrollees due to a lessened financial strain.

Call me crazy but the cost of expanding Medicaid seems a lot to pay just so someone can feel better about dying faster.

Let’s get past this idea that government expansion creates anything other than a feeding frenzy and a reduction of service to those who really need it.

Medicaid should remain for the most needy among us. The last thing anyone wants are the disabled and elderly left to die alone and without medical services.

The Division of Medicaid is preparing to notify them that they are about to lose their coverage.

Democrat’s and this coalition should stop this ridiculous effort to throw the sickest among us out in the street to prove a political point. They should get to the table now and get this done.

The Oregon study is the last nail in the coffin. Pun intended. It’s time to reauthorize the program and move on.

About Keith: Keith Plunkett has worked on communications issues with a range of public officials from aldermen to Congressmen, and a variety of businesses, governmental agencies and non-profits. He serves or has served as a board member of several non-profit, civic and political organizations. Contact him by going to HorizonMediaMarketing.com or follow him on Twitter @Keithplunkett

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Filed under Cecil Brown, contributor, Democrats, Entitlements, Ethics, Federal Government, health, Keith Plunkett, Legislature, Medicaid, Mississippi, Opinion, Politics, Spending, State Government, Taxes

AP: Freshmen legislators make their mark on education.


(Rep. Charles) Busby was tapped by leadership to carry the charter school bill in the House, and made the most of his opportunity. Though Democrats baited him in committee and during more than seven hours of debate on the House floor, Busby never lost his temper and was generally in command of the details of the legislation.

Other House Republican freshmen have also been influential on education matters, including Rep. Brad Mayo of Oxford and Rep. Pat Nelson of Southaven. Mayo carried other education bills this year. Nelson has played the role of maverick, serving as one of the chief vote-counters among charter school opponents in the 2012 session.

Pascagoula has a double dose of high-profile Republican freshmen, because Sen. Brice Wiggins also found success in the 2013 session as the Senate sponsor of an effort to create a limited state-funded prekindergarten program for the first time.

Another GOP newcomer, Sen. Angela Hill of Picayune, sponsored the bill that’s meant to improve literacy instruction in early grades and would flunk third-graders who couldn’t read on at least a basic level.

For other new Democrats, it’s harder to make an obvious mark, with the party in the minority in both chambers. The most vocal leaders among Democrats in the House have all been veterans. Some new Democrats have shown signs of promise, though, including Rep. Kevin Horan of Grenada, a former prosecutor.

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Filed under Mississippi State Senate, Education, Mississippi, Legislature, Mississippi State House, Democrats, Republican, Politics, Charles Busby, State Government, Public Service, Angela Burks Hill, Brice Wiggins, Brad Mayo, Pat Nelson

Harrison: Dems better hope no one calls their bluff.


Thus far Democrats have been remarkably cohesive on the issue of Medicaid expansion. If they remain cohesive in special session, they can again block the continuation of the existing program.

While the speaker is holding a strong hand, the Democrats can only hope the speaker and the governor do not call their bluff.

Are Democrats really willing to put in jeopardy an existing Medicaid program that provides health care for about 640,000 disabled, poor pregnant women, poor children and a certain segment of the elderly in order to try to get health care for about 300,000 people earning less than $15,000 annually – primarily the working poor?

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Filed under Democrats, Entitlements, Governor, health, Insurance, Legislature, Medicaid, Mississippi, Mississippi State House, Mississippi State Senate, Phil Bryant, Philip Gunn, Politics, Republican, State Government

Browning move to GOP ups Republican senate number to 32.


State Sen. Nicky Browning is leaving the Democratic Party to become a Republican.

Browning, of Pontotoc, said the decision was long in coming – that he had discussed the possibility with the governor and lieutenant governor prior to his last election in 2011.

“It’s something I’ve thought about a long time,” Browning said. “I have some personal reasons and, in the end, it was a family decision, that my wife and I decided. I just think I can represent my people better as a Republican than a Democrat.

“I’ve always been a real conservative vote, especially on business issues,” Browning said. “I’m an education vote, and I plan to continue to be because I have really good schools in my district and I will continue to support them.”

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Filed under Democrats, Legislature, Mississippi, Mississippi State Senate, Politics, Republican, State Government

Legislature to City Hall: 5 House members running for mayoral seats.


Mississippi State Capitol

Mississippi State Capitol (Photo credit: Ken Lund)

Five Mississippi House members are running for mayor this year, and while name recognition might provide some advantage, lawmakers have had a mixed record in trying to go from the Capitol to City Hall.

Some have made the move successfully, while others have found that electoral success on one level doesn’t translate to victory for another office.

Among those running for mayor now is longtime Democratic Rep. George Flaggs of Vicksburg, who ran unsuccessfully for the city’s top job in 1997.

The other four House members running for mayor are also Democrats: Billy Broomfield of Moss Point, Kelvin Buck of Holly Springs, Chuck Espy of Clarksdale and Omeria Scott of Laurel. All five face opposition.

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A former state senator, Republican Billy Hewes III, will become the next mayor of Gulfport. His only opponent dropped out of the race, giving Hewes a straight shot to City Hall. Hewes was elected to the Senate in 1991. , serving 20 years, with the last four as the chamber’s second-highest officer, president pro tempore. He ran for lieutenant governor in 2011, losing a hard-fought GOP primary to Tate Reeves.

Mayors sometimes seek “local and private” legislation — bills that affect only one city or county. If Hewes does that, or if he has other reasons to be at the Capitol, people will watch his working relationship with Reeves, who still has more than two years left on this term as lieutenant governor, the Senate’s presiding officer.

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Filed under Democrats, Legislature, Mississippi, Mississippi Municipalities, Mississippi State Senate, Politics, Public Service, Republican, Tate Reeves

Democrats seizing on Moody’s Investors Service report to push for Medicaid expansion.


English: Logo of the Democratic Party of the U...

English: Logo of the Democratic Party of the United States. Light blue D inside a darker blue circle. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Mississippi House Democratic leader Bobby Moak says the state could hurt its own financial standing if it rejects Medicaid expansion.

He and other Democrats pointed Monday to a statement made last week by Moody’s Investors Service.

The New York firm said last Thursday that states will face “political and budgetary pressure” to cover the hospitals’ loss of federal money for treating uninsured patients.

Moody’s estimates hospitals’ loss nationwide will be $17 billion a year by 2019. The firm says states that choose not to expand Medicaid may face large uninsured populations while federal payments to hospitals are declining.

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Filed under Democrats, health, Legislature, Medicaid, Mississippi, Politics, State Government