Thursday, October 31, 2013

FOXNews.com: Internal notes indicate only 6 people signed up for ObamaCare on first day

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Internal notes indicate only 6 people signed up for ObamaCare on first day
Nov 1st 2013, 01:55

Published October 31, 2013

FoxNews.com

Notes from an Obama administration meeting about the problem-plagued ObamaCare website indicate only six people signed up for the health care law on its first day, according to documents released by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

Fox News' Ed Henry told Megyn Kelly on "The Kelly File" Thursday that the documents, released by committee Chairman Rep. Darrell Issa, are not official enrollment numbers, but say that as of the morning of Oct. 2, "six enrollments have occurred so far with five different issuers."

The notes were taken at a "war room" meeting of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which has been tasked with implementing ObamaCare.

They say that at the next meeting, which took place on the afternoon of Oct. 2, "approximately 100" people had signed up and 248 enrollments had occurred by the morning of Oct. 3.

The Obama administration has thus far not released any official numbers on ObamaCare enrollment, saying the first numbers would be released in mid-November after the HHS collects data from a variety of different sources.

A HHS spokesman told Fox News the documents "appear to be notes," and do not include official enrollment statistics.

"As the Secretary said before Congress, we are focused on providing reliable and accurate information and we do not have that at this time due to the issues with 834 forms," Joanne Peters said. "We have always anticipated that the pace of enrollment will increase throughout the enrollment period."

Health care industry consultant Robert Laszewski told Kelly the numbers are not surprising, saying "clearly the White House does not want insurance companies talking about what's going here."

"And given what was released tonight, the news that so very few people are signing up, you can see why," he continued. "If four weeks ago the enrollment numbers were public it would look very bad. I can tell you based upon the information that I continue to get this trickle of enrollment that you're reporting on for the first three days has really continued for the first month."

The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee received the documents in response to its request to 11 of the contractors involved in the ObamaCare website rollout.

Fox News' Ed Henry contributed to this report 

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FOXNews.com: Sen. Cornyn: ObamaCare 'carve-out' for Congress is 'so egregious'

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Sen. Cornyn: ObamaCare 'carve-out' for Congress is 'so egregious'
Nov 1st 2013, 03:04

Published October 31, 2013

FoxNews.com

Sen. John Cornyn told Fox News' Greta Van Susteren Thursday night that the fact congressional Democrats have continually voted to keep subsidies for lawmakers and their staff under ObamaCare is "really so egregious."

Campaigns failed during the recent budget negotiations in both the House and the Senate to force Congress, the president, and many other administration officials onto ObamaCare without the additional subsidies they currently receive. 

Cornyn, R-Texas, noted on "On the Record" that "no other American" gets a similar subsidy from their employer.

"So that's why this special carve-out is really just really so egregious," he said.  "It's the kind of carve-out that I think most Americans will find very offensive, that Congress would pass a law and interpret the law in a way that benefits Congress and members of staff."

Cornyn said Republicans tried to eliminate this "carve-out" but Democrats blocked it on a party-line vote.

"I don't know how you explain this back at home if you're a Democrat running for reelection," he said.

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FOXNews.com: Hayes: Botched ObamaCare website is 'just the beginning'

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Hayes: Botched ObamaCare website is 'just the beginning'
Nov 1st 2013, 00:35

Published October 31, 2013

FoxNews.com

Weekly Standard writer and Fox News contributor Steve Hayes told viewers Thursday on "Special Report with Bret Baier" that the Obama administration's problematic healthcare website, which has been plagued with glitches since its launch, is just the tip of the iceberg.

"The website is really just the beginning," Hayes said.  'I think you're talking about the potential collapse, not only of ObamaCare as we have understood it, but potentially the insurance industry more broadly."

The administration, Hayes said, is "clearly blaming the insurance companies" and "decided to make them a villain," which he believes will lead to an ugly fight between the two over the healthcare rollout.

Hayes also dismissed the administration's attempt to spin President Obama's previous assertions that if individuals were happy with their current plans, they could keep them - a statement that turned out to be false since not all plans met the health act's requirements - by saying that only five percent of the country would lose their policies.

'If you're talking about 15 million as the 'just five percent' - the original goal was to cover an additional 30 (million people). So you're talking about half of the population of the uninsured that was the reason for the entire plan in the first place," Hayes said.  "So it's a little disingenuous for them to minimize that many people."

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FOXNews.com: Hagel blasts states on same-sex military benefits policy

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Hagel blasts states on same-sex military benefits policy
Nov 1st 2013, 01:01

Published October 31, 2013

Associated Press

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel on Thursday sharply criticized U.S. states that are defying the Pentagon by refusing to allow National Guard facilities to issue ID cards that enable same-sex spouses of military members to claim benefits.

"This is wrong," Hagel said in remarks prepared for delivery in New York.

"Not only does this violate the states' obligation under federal law, their actions have created hardship and inequality by forcing couples to travel long distances to federal military bases to obtain the ID cards they're entitled to," he said.

Hagel said this is causing division among the military ranks.

In his remarks prepared for an Anti-Defamation League centennial dinner speech, Hagel did not name the states that are defying Pentagon policy on this issue. But the Pentagon has cited nine: Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas and West Virginia.

The Pentagon says there are 114 Army and Air National Guard sites in those nine states that are not providing ID cards to eligible same-sex spouses.

Hagel also used his speech to announce that he has directed the Marine Corps to expedite the manufacture and delivery to Israel of V-22 Osprey aircraft, hybrids that take off and land like a helicopter and cruise like an airplane. It is to be the first overseas sale of the Osprey.

Hagel also offered assurances that the Obama administration's interest in negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program is a way of testing Iranian intentions for a diplomatic solution to a matter that has been in dispute for years.

"If we can find ways to resolve disputes peacefully, we are wise to explore them," he said in his prepared remarks. Israel is skeptical of any negotiation with Iran.

Convinced Iran is pursuing the development of nuclear weapons to threaten his country, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the Iranians are trying to trick the West into easing economic sanctions while still pushing forward with their nuclear program. Iran insists its program is for peaceful purposes.

Hagel focused much of his dinner speech on the gay rights matter, which was a central issue during the tenure of his predecessor at the Pentagon, Leon Panetta. Panetta, who retired in February, was honored at the dinner for his long career in public service.

Under Pentagon policy that took effect Sept. 3, same-sex spouses of military members are eligible for the same health care, housing and other benefits enjoyed by opposite-sex spouses. That decision followed the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in June on the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act.

Some states, however, have refused to allow issuance of the necessary Pentagon ID cards on National Guard facilities.

In Oklahoma, for example, Gov. Mary Fallin ordered her state's National Guard to stop processing requests, making legally married gay couples apply for benefits on federal facilities like Tinker Air Force Base. Oklahoma in 2004 approved a constitutional amendment prohibiting giving benefits of marriage to gay couples.

Hagel said these states' policies are unfair. He said he ordered the chief of the National Guard Bureau, Gen. Frank Grass, to "take immediate action to remedy this situation."

It was not immediately clear what legal authority Grass has to force the states to change course.

Hagel said he instructed Grass to meet with the adjutants general from the nine states where the ID cards are being denied at state facilities. He said those adjutants general, who work for their states' governor, "will be expected to comply" with Pentagon policy on this issue.

The American Military Partner Association, an advocacy group for gay and lesbian military members, praised Hagel's remarks.

"Secretary Hagel has made it clear the National Guard in these few rogue states are failing to live up to their obligations to military families under federal law," said Stephen Peters, the association's president. "We applaud him in showing strong leadership by ordering the National Guard in these states to comply and follow lawful direction and DoD policy."

Defense officials estimate there are 18,000 same-sex couples in the active-duty military, National Guard and Reserves and among military retirees. It's unclear how many of those are married. The Pentagon policy on equal access to benefits does not apply to unmarried gay partners of military members.

A Pentagon ban on gays serving openly in the military was dropped in September 2011.

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FOXNews.com: Federal appeals court reinstates most Texas' abortion restrictions

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Federal appeals court reinstates most Texas' abortion restrictions
Oct 31st 2013, 23:52

Published October 31, 2013

Associated Press

Members of the gallery cheer and chant as the Texas Senate tries to bring an abortion bill to a vote as time expires, Wednesday, June 26, 2013, in Austin, Texas. Amid the deafening roar of abortion rights supporters, Texas Republicans huddled around the Senate podium to pass new abortion restrictions, but whether the vote was cast before or after midnight is in dispute. If signed into law, the measures would close almost every abortion clinic in Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

A federal appeals court has reinstated most of Texas' new abortion restrictions.

A panel of judges at the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals issued a ruling Thursday evening, three days after District Judge Lee Yeakel said one provision serves no medical purpose.

The panel says that the law requiring doctors to have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital can take effect while a lawsuit moves forward.

The Texas attorney general's office argued that the law is a constitutional use of the Legislature's authority.

Lawyers for Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers had argued that the regulations did not protect women and would shut down a third of the abortion clinics in Texas.

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FOXNews.com: Government paid millions in Medicare to deceased, illegal immigrants

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Government paid millions in Medicare to deceased, illegal immigrants
Oct 31st 2013, 18:48

Published October 31, 2013

Washington Free Beacon

The federal government has paid tens of millions of dollars in Medicare benefits to dead people and illegal immigrants, according to a pair of reports from federal watchdogs released on Thursday.

The Department of Health and Human Services' Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services paid out $23 million to beneficiaries after their deaths in 2011, according to one report from HHS' inspector general.

Another report tallied more than $28 million in payments from 2009 to 2011 to individuals who were in the country illegally.

In all, CMS paid Medicare benefits to 4,139 illegal immigrants and 17,403 deceased people, according to the two reports.

Federal regulations prohibit illegal immigrants from receiving Medicare benefits. CMS has policies in place to prevent people who are unlawfully present from receiving benefits under Medicare Parts A and B, but no such protections for Medicare Part D benefits.

Click for more from The Washington Free Beacon

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FOXNews.com: Senate GOP blocks Obama pick for key federal court

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Senate GOP blocks Obama pick for key federal court
Oct 31st 2013, 17:20

Published October 31, 2013

Associated Press

Senate Republicans have blocked confirmation of President Barack Obama's nominee to one of the most influential federal courts.

Obama had nominated Patricia Millett to join the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Millett has worked as a lawyer for both Democratic and Republican administrations.

The court rules on federal agency actions and is considered second in power only to the Supreme Court.

The Senate voted 55-38 Thursday to halt GOP delaying tactics against her nomination. But that was 5 votes short of the 60 needed to end the Republican blockade.

Republicans said they oppose Millett because they want to prevent Democratic-appointed judges on the D.C. Circuit Court from having a 5-4 majority.

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FOXNews.com: Senate GOP blocks two Obama nominees

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Senate GOP blocks two Obama nominees
Oct 31st 2013, 18:07

Published October 31, 2013

Associated Press

Senate Republicans blocked President Barack Obama's nominees to lead an influential federal court and a housing agency on Thursday, despite Democratic warnings of a return to last summer's partisan brawl over who wields power in the Senate.

In rapid succession, Democrats failed to overcome GOP delaying tactics against Patricia Millett to join the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and Rep. Melvin Watt to head the Federal Housing Finance Agency.

The votes were 55-38 to free Millett's nomination for final passage and 56-42 for Watt's, but both fell short of the 60 votes needed to break the Republican procedural blockade.

The Millett nomination was the flashpoint because the D.C. circuit court rules on federal agency and White House actions, and Millett's confirmation would have given that court's judges a 5-4 tilt toward those chosen by Democratic presidents. Appointments to that court, which currently has three vacant judgeships, are lifetime positions.

Republicans argued that the D.C. court's workload was lighter than other districts and didn't merit an additional judge. They also said Democrats want to turn that court, considered second in power only to the Supreme Court, into a rubber stamp for Obama administration policies.

"This is the court that can rule for or against the executive orders of this administration," said Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa. "We need to maintain checks and balances of the government."

Democrats say caseload totals for the D.C. circuit are close to its 10-year average. They also say that when Republicans held the White House, they voted to fill the D.C. court's ninth seat with John Roberts, now the chief justice of the U.S.

They also said GOP opposition to Millett is based strictly on politics and warned they might use their 55-45 Senate majority to weaken the Senate minority party's powers to block nominations.

"If Republican senators are going to hold nominations hostage without consideration of individual merit, we will have drastic measures," said Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.

Last July, Democrats abandoned a threat to change Senate rules after Republicans agreed to supply enough votes for approval of several Obama nominations. Those included his choices to head the Environmental Protection Agency and the Labor Department.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., indicated that Democrats might not act immediately, saying, "I appreciate" a suggestion by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., that the two parties talk about the next steps.

"Always willing to do that," Reid said.

Reid switched his vote to "no" on the roll calls for both Millett and Watt, a procedural move that gives him the right to force fresh votes on both nominees.

Millett was an assistant solicitor general, representing the administration before the Supreme Court, under both Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush. She has argued 32 cases before the highest court.

Obama has also nominated attorney Cornelia "Nina" Pillard and U.S. District Judge Robert Wilkins to bring the court to its full strength of 11 judges, nominations that have yet to reach the full Senate.

Republicans are backing a bill by Grassley and others to eliminate one of the D.C. court's 11 judgeships and transfer two others to districts with heavier workloads.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency oversees government-owned mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Watt is a 21-year House veteran who has served his entire tenure on the House Financial Services Committee. At the housing agency, he would succeed acting director Edward DeMarco, a George W. Bush appointee criticized by Democrats for not letting Fannie and Freddie reduce principal costs for homeowners risking foreclosure.

Democrats have praised Watt for having a pro-consumer record, including opposing risky Wall Street behavior that helped produce the 2008 financial industry collapse. He's won support from the National Association of Realtors and the National Association of Home Builders.

Republicans said Watt was short on technical expertise needed to oversee Fannie and Freddie and said he lacked political independence.

He also faced opposition from the influential conservative groups Heritage Action for America and the Club for Growth. They warned Republicans that their votes on Watt would be counted in their ratings of 2014 candidates.

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FOXNews.com: Senate GOP blocks Obama pick for housing agency

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Senate GOP blocks Obama pick for housing agency
Oct 31st 2013, 16:40

Published October 31, 2013

Associated Press

WASHINGTON –  Senate Republicans have blocked President Obama's nominee to head the federal agency that oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The Senate voted Thursday 56-42 for Congressman Melvin Watt's nomination. But that was 4 short of the 60 votes needed to end GOP delaying tactics.

Watt is a North Carolina Democrat whom Obama picked to head the Federal Housing Finance Agency as the wounded housing industry has begun to recover. Democrats said Watt's 21 years in the House, on the Financial Services Committee, gave him expertise needed for the job.

Republicans say Watt is too political, while conservative groups have attacked his support for government involvement in the housing industry.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are the giant government-owned mortgage lenders that own or back half of U.S. mortgages.

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FOXNews.com: Cory Booker sworn in as US Senator

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Cory Booker sworn in as US Senator
Oct 31st 2013, 16:58

Published October 31, 2013

Associated Press

Wednesday, Oct. 16, 2013: Newark Mayor Cory Booker exits a polling booth in his race to win a Senate seat, Newark, N.J.AP

WASHINGTON –  Former Newark, N.J., Mayor Cory Booker was sworn in as a Democratic senator from New Jersey on Thursday, taking the oath of office, exchanging hugs with Vice President Joe Biden and acknowledging the applause of friends and family members seated in the visitor's gallery that rings the chamber.

Booker became the second African American in the Senate, alongside Republican Tim Scott of South Carolina.

Booker, 44, was elected to fill out the term of the late Sen. Frank Lautenberg, who died earlier this year.

His first day in office was a busy one. Before taking the oath of office, he and his mother met with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

Minutes after being sworn in, he participated in his first roll call vote, supporting an attempt by Democrats to advance the nomination of Rep. Mel Watt, D-N.C. to head the Federal Housing Finance Agency.

Booker also was to meet later in the day with President Barack Obama at the White House.

Booker placed his hand on his own Bible as Biden led him in reciting the oath of office.

His oath-taking gave Democrats control of 55 Senate seats, counting two held by independents. Republicans hold 45.

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FOXNews.com: Dems Back on the ObamaCare Grind

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Dems Back on the ObamaCare Grind
Oct 31st 2013, 16:08

Chris Stirewalt
Published October 31, 2013

FoxNews.com

President Obama is asking Democrats to "grind it out" and stick with him and his embattled new entitlement program despite a disastrous launch and new revelations that he misled voters with claims about being able to keep their insurance.

That may work for the blue-state true believers the president spoke to in Boston on Wednesday, but "grind it out" isn't exactly an ideal swing-state strategy. With approval for Obama and ObamaCare damaged in the rollout crash and concerns mounting rather than receding, the president's request is a substantial one. "Grind it out" means grinding down their own poll numbers.

In purple state Virginia, the ObamaCare crash has already singed Democrat Terry McAuliffe, the Clinton retainer and moneyman who was previously cruising to election over Republican Ken Cuccinelli. McAuliffe, running as a Clinton Democrat, had worked hard to steer clear of ObamaCare issues and was instead focused on Republican obstructionism as his preferred Washington issue. And that was a winner in a state home to so many federal employees and contractors.

But then came the crash. As this week began, McAuliffe was campaigning with former President Bill Clinton, talking about working across the aisle and riding a 9-point lead in the Quinnipiac University poll. But this Sunday, McAuliffe will find himself only 3 points ahead and campaigning with Obama, namesake of the unpopular law.

Obama will do what he always does in politics: fire up the party's liberal base and attack Republican efforts. Democratic turnout, especially among black voters, will be key to McAuliffe's hopes of holding on for the win. But are a few rounds of "Yes we can!" worth reminding suburban moms that McAuliffe has vowed to make the commonwealth a full participant in the law? Such anxiety was enough to help a Republican win a special election in Massachusetts in 2010. McAuliffe may be quietly wishing Obama would limit his Virginia visits to rounds of golf at Ft. Belvoir.

If that's the case in a state Obama won last year by 3 points, how's the ObamaCare crash playing in one the president lost by 17 points?

Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., will offer her own bill that will allow Americans to keep their existing insurance plans, outbidding Republicans.

When news broke this week that the president for years led voters to believe they could keep their coverage under his insurance overhaul despite knowing otherwise, Republicans pounced offering legislation to block the Obama rules banning low-post, bare-bones coverage.  

Now it's the Democrats turn for a fright.

Landrieu, facing a tough re-election fight in a Republican state, is jumping the line with a bill of her own.  "The promise was made and it should be kept," Landrieu told the New Orleans Times-Picayune. "And it was our understanding when we voted for that, that people when they have insurance, could keep what they had. So, I'm going to be working on that fix."

Doesn't sound like Senator Landrieu wants to "grind it out" for ObamaCare.

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., isn't grinding it out, either. He is preparing his own legislation that would delay by a full year the imposition of ObamaCare fines for those who don't buy insurance, despite administration veto threats. The magnitude of the technical failures surrounding the program are so vast that such a delay may be just the starting point of negotiations, especially if the first revelations of signup data reveal a low number of paying customers.

Anew WSJ/NBC News poll shows why.

Obama's job approval rating skidded to 42 percent, his lowest-ever rating in the poll. That's an 11-point drop from his job approval rating following his re-election and 5 points since last month. Disapproval for the health law shot up to 47 percent, 10 points ahead of approval, double the gap from earlier this month.

It was a dire WSJ/NBC News poll that drove Republicans to the exits on the partial federal shutdown three weeks ago. Now it's the Democrats turn for a fright. The president's tanking poll numbers and the surge in concern over the beleaguered ObamaCare rollout will push more moderate Democrats to conclude that their best path is away from the president and his law. Shutdowns are temporary. ObamaCare is forever.

The frustrations among the Obama Democrats mirror those of Republicans who backed former Sen. Jim DeMint's "de-fund ObamaCare" gambit ahead of the shutdown.

Like DeMint and his allies, the president and his supporters believe that if more moderate members of their party were willing to go against their beliefs and endure seasick poll numbers that they could win an ideological victory as well as a political one. Just grind it out for a while and it will all work out.

Moderate Republicans weren't willing to grind their way through the shutdown. Moderate Democrats aren't going to grind out the ObamaCare crash, either.

Chris Stirewalt is digital politics editor for Fox News.  His Power Play column appears Tuesdays and Thursdays at FoxNews.com. Catch Chris live online weekdays at 11:30 am ET.  Read his "Fox News First" newsletter published each weekday morning. Sign up here.

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