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Friday, November 12, 2010

Is it Worth It?

The term that keeps coming up when you talk to Republican staffers in the House of Representatives about their 2011 agenda is: oversight.

“I think one of the lessons Republicans learned when they lost power in 2006 is they should have done more oversight of their own people,” says one Democrat on Capitol Hill who doesn’t think oversight of the Obama Administration would be such a bad idea.

If Republicans didn’t learn the lesson of conducting more oversight of their own, they sure are planning to teach a lesson to their colleagues on the other side of the aisle.

Unless you were living under a rock, you know that repealing health care reform was one of the top issues Republican candidates across the country ran on as they took over the majority in House and made major gains in the Senate.

The start of that process, according to many Republicans, is to haul up heads of key agencies in HHS—including the HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius—to start asking some hard questions about healthcare reform and its implementation going forward.
“Once he gets vaccinated, we look forward to seeing him” for oversight hearings, quips one Hill staffer of Acting CMS Administrator Don Berwick, who has yet to go before a House congressional committee but will testify before the Senate Finance Committee on November 17.

CMS is already a focal point of the soon-to-be incoming Congress with pending national coverage decisions for Dendreon’s prostate cancer cell-based immunotherapy Provenge, Amgen’s Aranesp and erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs), and the possibility of doing the same with Roche/Genentech’s Avastin for first-line treatment of breast cancer.

The House Oversight & Government Reform Committee, which will be chaired by Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) come January, has already sent a letter to FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg probing the agency’s oversight of pharmaceutical manufacturing plants in Puerto Rico. The letter promises more questions in the future, and we expect an in-person appearance before the committee will not be far off.
The question is: are Obama Administration officials ready and willing to face a hostile Congress for the two years?

There are already rumors in Washington that HHS Secretary Sebelius could be the next high-level official out the door. And FDA Commissioner Hamburg has a built-in successor in Deputy Joshua Sharfstein, who has previous Hill experience. And remember, Berwick is still only “acting” (he was a recess appointment) and has yet to be confirmed by the Senate.

Whether they stay or go may depend on their appetite for a good, long public fight. Do they think it’s worth it? We’ll know in the next 12 months.

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