Thursday, July 18, 2019

Court releases secret government study - 76 billion opioid pills shipped to America during Obama presidency - Obama and Big Pharma


This week the following stunning story broke in the Washington Post.


76 billion opioid pills: Newly released federal data unmasks the epidemic
By Scott Higham ,
July 16 at 8:19 PM
America’s largest drug companies saturated the country with 76 billion oxycodone and hydrocodone pain pills from 2006 through 2012 as the nation’s deadliest drug epidemic spun out of control, according to previously undisclosed company data released as part of the largest civil action in U.S. history.




Was this why America was pushed into the deadly opioid crisis?  What caused this massive saturation of opioid pills, 76 billion of them by 2012?

Ironically, the massive trafficking came to a peak with the election of President Barack Obama in 2008, and during his first term s president.


One wonders if it might be related to the fact Obama recruited many of his team from the corporate world, in spite of being the champion of hope and change.  His stunning pick of Goldman Sachs manager Rahm Emanuel as Chief of Staff, a financial company that represented many large pharma players, cemented that relationship.

The following are the headlines of many liberal media and financial media stories during the early Obama years when they first raised questions about a secret deal between Obama and big pharma at the time.     

You be the judge... 

  
Published on
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
By  Raw Story
Obama Received $20 Million from Healthcare Industry in 2008 Campaign
Almost three times the amount given to McCain
by
Brad Jacobson


Obama Was Pushed by Drug Industry, E-Mails Suggest
By PETER BAKERJUNE 8, 2012



Obamacare architect leaves White House for pharmaceutical industry job


May 25, 2013, 10:29am
Obamacare Will Bring Drug Industry $35 Billion In Profits

Bruce Japsen Senior Contributor
I write about healthcare business and policy


Obama gives powerful drug lobby a seat at healthcare table
By TOM HAMBURGER
AUG. 4, 2009




Obama’s Secret Deal With The Drugmakers
By Karen TumultyAug. 06, 2009



Big Pharma Lobby Group Spent Record Amount as Reform Push Grows

By 
January 22, 2019, 6:19 PM EST Updated on January 23, 2019, 1:36 AM EST
Trade association for drug makers spent $27.5 million in 2018

Total surpasses spending during 2009 health-care reform debate

The pharmaceutical industry’s leading trade group disclosed Tuesday that it had spent a record $27.5 million on lobbying in 2018, $1.4 million more than in 2009, when Congress and the White House created the Affordable Care Act, the health-care overhaul better known as Obamacare.



The one that got away: Obamacare and the drug industry
By BRETT NORMAN and SARAH KARLIN-SMITH

07/13/2016 05:32 AM EDT



 How big pharma's money – and its politicians – feed the US opioid crisis

----------------------------------------------------

The Opioid crisis in America

Every day, more than 130 people in the United States die after overdosing on opioids. The misuse of and addiction to opioids—including prescription pain relieversheroin, and synthetic opioids such as fentanyl—is a serious national crisis that affects public health as well as social and economic welfare. 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that the total "economic burden" of prescription opioid misuse alone in the United States is $78.5 billion a year, including the costs of healthcare, lost productivity, addiction treatment, and criminal justice involvement.

In 2017 an estimated 1.7 million people in the United States suffered from substance use disorders related to prescription opioid pain relievers, and 652,000 suffered from a heroin use disorder.

There should be no doubt in your mind the tremendous impact this secret deal had in enabling the flood of opioids which is killing over 70,000 people a year.

Now if that does not spark your curiosity perhaps the following might.  It is a transcript of a the PBS award winning news program Frontline hosted by Jim Gilmore.  The title of the segment, Obama's Deal.

Here is the official PBS trailer about the show.


The following is the panel discussion about Obama's Deal with big pharma in America after being elected president.



Frontline
Obama's Deal
Posted April 13, 2010, updated April 23, 2010


PRODUCED BY
Michael Kirk

Jim Gilmore
Mike Wiser

REPORTED BY

Jim Gilmore
WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY

Michael Kirk

Jim Gilmore

Sen. BARACK OBAMA (D-IL), Presidential Candidate: Fired up! Ready to Go!
ANNOUNCER: Tonight on FRONTLINE-

Sen. BARACK OBAMA: Your voice can win an election!

ANNOUNCER: He promised change.

Sen. BARACK OBAMA: Your voice can create the kind of America we dream about!

ANNOUNCER: Then he took on one of Washington's toughest issues.

Sen. BARACK OBAMA: Let's be the generation that says we will have universal health care in America. We can do that!

ANNOUNCER: What happened next surprised everyone.

Sen. ORRIN HATCH (R-UT), Finance Committee: The only way you they could get it through was to bribe their members.

TOM DASCHLE (D-SD), Senate Majority Leader, 2001-03: Hundreds of millions of dollars spent on lobbying.

CHRIS JENNINGS, Sr. Clinton Health Care Adviser, 1993-01: Very political, very aggressive at creating deals.

DAVID GERGEN, Counselor to President Clinton, 1993-94: Those deals can be pretty smelly.
NEWSCASTER: Another day, another headache for President Obama.

NEWSCASTER: Is this just the dirty reality of politics?

NEWSCASTER: News of a back room deal-

SCOTT BROWN (R-MA), Senate Candidate: All those back room deals- it's just wrong, and we can do better!

PETER BAKER, The New York Times: It was a wake-up call that President Obama wasn't everything that they thought he was.

SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, The New York Times: The president has staked his entire first term on this.

RYAN LIZZA, The New Yorker: There's always two sides of Obama. You have to lift up people, but at the end of the day, it is about deal making.

ANNOUNCER: Tonight on FRONTLINE, Obama's Deal.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: At stake right now is not just our ability to solve this problem but our ability to solve any problem.

NEWSCASTER: It's the inauguration day of the nation's first African-American president.

NARRATOR: Barack Obama had promised change.

NEWSCASTER: He spoke of no less than remaking America.

NARRATOR: His signature issue, universal health care.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: In this effort, every voice has to be heard.

NEWSCASTER: This is a huge issue the president is taking on now.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Every idea must be considered.

NEWSCASTER: Everybody loves the idea of health care reform.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Every option must be on the table. There should be no sacred cows.

NEWSCASTER: Could health care reform really happen?

NARRATOR: From the very beginning, even inside his own West Wing, the issue would test President Obama.

RYAN LIZZA, The New Yorker: The White House had a debate about whether they should actually go forward with it.

NARRATOR: No president had ever made headway on comprehensive health care reform.

JONATHAN COHN, Sr. Editor, The New Republic: First if became, "Let's not do health care." Then it was scale health care back.

RYAN LIZZA: Vice President Biden was opposed to doing it, absolutely opposed to doing health care. Biden had seen too many universal health care programs die in his long time in Washington, and he warned Obama and his aides not to do it.

DAVID NEXON, Fmr. Kennedy Aide: The economic team was saying, "Oh, listen, we've got to spend all our energy on fixing the recession. We can't launch a big spending program at this time."

NARRATOR: The president took it all in, and then it was chief of staff Rahm Emanuel's turn.

SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, The New York Times: He's a brilliant political strategist, hard-nosed, profane, just a force of nature.

CHRIS JENNINGS, Sr. Clinton Health Care Adviser, 1993-01: Very political, very aggressive at creating deals. In fact, probably more so than one would anticipate someone from the Obama administration being.

NARRATOR: Obama's choice of an inside deal maker like Emanuel had surprised many of his supporters.

RYAN LIZZA: He's sort of the opposite of Obama in a lot of ways. It was an immediate indication that this White House was not going to be about "Kumbaya" and getting along and trying to do everything they could to win Republican votes, they were going to try and win.

NARRATOR: Emanuel told Obama to win, he needed to move fast.

PETER BAKER, The New York Times: He recognized that the moment Obama was going to be at his strongest was the beginning.

NARRATOR: In the end, the president decided to go for health care right away to make a larger point.

DAN PFEIFFER, White House Communications Director: We were sitting in the Oval Office and we were sort of having a debate around health care at one point, and the president said, "It's about health care, but it's not really about health care. It's also about proving whether we can still solve big problems in this country." And this was going to be the test case for that.

NARRATOR: In his first address to Congress, the president wasted no time putting health care on the nation's agenda.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Let there be no doubt. Health care reform cannot wait, it must not wait, and it will not wait another year!

SHERYL GAY STOLBERG: The president has staked his entire first term on this.

MATT BAI, The New York Times Magazine: There's no bigger priority than health care.
Pres. BARACK OBAMA: [February 24, 2009] We can no longer afford to put health care reform on hold. We can't afford to do it!

NARRATOR: At the time, it looked like an easy victory for the president.

TOM DASCHLE, (D-SD), Senate Majority Leader, 2001-03: Failure to do this would be viewed as a failure to govern, an inability to use the 60 vote majority that we have in the Senate and the significant margin we have in the House.

JOHN PODESTA, Co-Chair, Obama Transition, 2008-09: I don't think anyone in the White House or on Capitol Hill believe that failure's an option here. They have to be successful in getting health care reform done or they'll pay a tremendous political price.

NARRATOR: Rahm Emanuel knew about the political price an administration pays when it loses the battle for health care reform. Sixteen years ago, he worked in the Clinton administration.

DAN BALZ, The Washington Post: The Clinton effort to do health care was sort of a classic "smart people will solve your problems" approach to an enormously complex, messy political issue.

MATT BAI: Bill Clinton delivered a, you know, thousand-page plan onto the doorstep of Congress after a year and said,"My wife came up with this. It's a really good plan. Pass it," at which point the chairmen, who'd been there longer than them and were going to be there longer than them, basically tossed it aside and killed the bill.

DENNIS RIVERA, Service Employees Int'l Union: I remember Patrick Moynihan, the senator from New York, telling me in his very thick Irish accent that he just got this document, 1,273 pages, describing how health care reform should be done and basically 
says, "I'm not even going to read it."

NARRATOR: The Clinton White House also angered powerful special interests.

TOM DASCHLE: The AMA opposed them. The insurance companies opposed them. The doctors across the board, hospitals, you name it, they were on the other side, and the Clinton administration understood that there was little hope that they would ever bring them around.

"LOUISE": [television commercial] But this was covered under our old plan!

NARRATOR: They buried the administration in an avalanche of negative TV commercials.

"HARRY": The government may force us to pick from a few health care plans designed by government bureaucrats.

"LOUISE": Having choices we don't like is no choice at all.

"HARRY": And they choose.

"LOUISE": And we lose.

DAVID GERGEN, Counselor to President Clinton, 1993-94: The Harry and Louise ads cost and cost and cost us in the Clinton years.

Sen. GEORGE MITCHELL (D-ME), Majority Leader: It is clear that health insurance reform cannot be enacted this year.

NARRATOR: They were handed a devastating defeat. Emanuel had seen it all. Sixteen years later, as President Obama's chief of staff, he would try do things differently.

SHERYL GAY STOLBERG: What did he do that's different from what Bill and Hillary did? Everything. Everything.

DAN PFEIFFER: The great lesson that everyone shared, both folks like Rahm, who were there, and historians, is you need congressional buy-in on the front end.

NARRATOR: The White House would hold Congress's hand every step of the way. Obama and Emanuel had stocked the West Wing with an all-star line-up of former congressional insiders.

JOHN PODESTA: He's got Pete Rouse, who served as both Daschle and then Senator Obama's chief of staff.

MATT BAI: The head of management and budget, Peter Orszag, was the head of the Congressional Budget Office.

SHERYL GAY STOLBERG: Melody Barnes, who is the head of the Domestic Policy Council, was for years a top aide to Ted Kennedy.

JOHN PODESTA: Phil Schiliro, who was the top staff guy for Henry Waxman.

MATT BAI: In the communications department, Robert Gibbs, who worked in the Senate, who's now the press secretary.

JOHN PODESTA: So they had a very, very strong team of people who knew the Hill, knew how to work the Hill, knew how to have success on the Hill.

NARRATOR: And to run it, they brought back the quintessential Washington insider, former Senate majority leader Tom Daschle.

MICHAEL MYERS, Sr. Adviser to Sen. Kennedy, 1998-09: It was an enormous signal that this really is a priority for the administration. They're not messing around, they're bringing in the pros, they're bringing in the big guys to get this done.

NARRATOR: Obama decided he would stay in the background. He would encourage Congress to come up with a plan, fast track it, relying on good will and personal 
relationships to get it passed. But the idea of hiring insiders almost immediately hit a snag.

NEWSCASTER: ABC News has learned of problems faced by another of President Obama's cabinet choices, Tom Daschle, the president's-

NEWSCASTER: Tom Daschle is trying to save his nomination.

NEWSCASTER: -an unwanted distraction for the Obama administration-

COMMENTATOR: And I think that just shows a problem with integrity, and we cannot afford that in our government right now..

NARRATOR: The once powerful Senate majority leader had made enemies. The Finance Committee chairman, Max Baucus, a Democrat from Montana, was an old rival.

CECI CONNOLLY, The Washington Post: Daschle was not helped by the fact that Max Baucus was not necessarily a close friend or ally.

NARRATOR: Baucus allowed Republicans on the committee to tear into Daschle's personal finances.

DAN BALZ: You had a very rigorous Senate Finance Committee staff that was scrubbing the tax returns of the nominees that were going through that committee that's unlike anything that I think we've seen in many years.

NARRATOR: Senate investigators found income tax problems. Daschle had left the government and cashed in, making millions at a Washington law firm. Along the way, a client had provided a limo for Daschle's personal use. Eventually, he paid more than $140,000 in taxes and penalties on the gift.

JONATHAN COHN: To this day, I think there are people in the greater Daschle universe who say the reason that Tom Daschle did not make it through the confirmation process is because Max Baucus gave him such a hard time, dragging out the confirmation, and the details and all the financial disclosures.

NEWSCASTER: There is plenty of drama in Washington at the moment-

NEWSCASTER: -Republicans talking about limousine liberals who don't even pay taxes on their limousines-

NEWSCASTER: It's a very bad cloud over this nomination.

POLITICIAN: It's disheartening, obviously. It frustrates me.

NEWSCASTER: Do

NEWSCASTER: Does this really represent the kind of change that Mr. Obama said he would be bringing to his administration?

NARRATOR: Daschle had been around long enough to know he had become a liability for the new president.

CECI CONNOLLY: Obama quickly, calmly accepted the resignation offer, did not pause, did not look back.

NARRATOR: He'd campaigned as a political outsider but surrounded himself with insiders and watched as one of them was taken down in a political knife fight. Seven weeks into his presidency, in March of 2009, the new president gathered in one room at one time friends and potential enemies alike.

NEWSCASTER: They're talking about lawmakers, doctors, nurses, hospitals-

NEWSCASTER: -bringing together lawmakers and interest groups, cabinet officials, members of Congress, the White House team conferring on how to overhaul health care.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: I know people are afraid we'll draw the same old lines in the sand and give in to the same entrenched interests and-

CECI CONNOLLY: Many of these players for years, if not decades, had a record of opposing any sort of health care reform efforts.

NARRATOR: Rahm Emanuel engineered this strategy. Everyone remembered how special interests had sabotaged the Clinton plan.

PETER BAKER: They want to get people at the table. They don't want this to be, at first at least, a fight against the insurers, a fight against the medical industry. They want- the pharmaceutical industry. They want to get buy-in.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: I want to switch gears and get some groups in here.

NARRATOR: Obama's advisers had told him that many of the lobbyists in the room were prepared to cut a deal. Karen Ignagni is the chief lobbyist for the insurance industry.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Why don't you wait for a mike, Karen, so that-

KAREN IGNAGNI, Pres., America's Health Insurance Plans: We entered this year being committed to change, being committed to restructuring and committed to actually helping to get this done.

We hear the American people about what's not working. We've taken that very seriously. You have our commitment to play, to contribute, and to help pass health care reform this year.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Good. Thank you, Karen. That's good news. That's America's Health Insurance Plans. [applause]

SHERYL GAY STOLBERG: This was really astonishing. Here she was, on record, saying, "We're going to help you." And so, too, were the drug companies.

WENDELL POTTER, V.P., CIGNA Insurance, 2003-08: Karen Ignagni wanted to be sure that she was at the White House, representing the industry in the most positive way that she possibly could. It was part of the industry's charm offensive, as I call it. The industry knew that it was going to be under attack this year, or at least the legislation would focus very heavily on the insurance industry.

JONATHAN COHN: And you know, look, I mean, they could read the political tea leaves, You know, the saying in Washington was, "You can be at the table or you can be on the menu."

NARRATOR: Privately, Ignagni was playing hardball. She said she'd support the bill only if everyone was required to buy health insurance.

TOM DASCHLE: They said for the first time they would support universal coverage with one caveat, and that is that we have an individual mandate requiring people to buy insurance, so it's not just the sick that buy insurance but everybody. That was the quid pro quo.

NARRATOR: Obama had campaigned against the mandate. Ignagni was insisting he reverse himself.

WENDELL POTTER: They want to make sure that they get a requirement that all of us buy health insurance. They want to make sure that we are all forced by to buy products from them. And they want to make sure that there's no alternative other than the private insurance market. That's why they're so adamantly opposed to the public option.

NARRATOR: Obama had also supported the public option, a government health plan, and Ignagni wanted him to walk away from that, too.

JONATHAN COHN: It is not wiping out the private insurance industry, it's just creating a public insurance plan that would compete with private insurers. But they wanted no part of that.

NARRATOR: Emanuel would keep Obama away from direct deal making with Ignagni, but with Tom Daschle gone and health care's most powerful advocate, Ted Kennedy, dying of cancer, the negotiations would have to be handled by that powerful chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Max Baucus.

CECI CONNOLLY: Who do they get after losing Tom Daschle and largely Ted Kennedy? Max Baucus. Not the first choice of most of the people in the West Wing.

MATT BAI: He's not glamorous. He's one of the senior most senators. Very few Americans know anything about him.

PETER BAKER: He's from Montana, a more conservative Democrat than a lot of people in the White House, worked with the Bush administration on things like tax cuts and issues that are anathema to a lot of the liberal base.

NARRATOR: Cutting deals with health care industry groups was right down Max Baucus's alley.

PAUL BLUMENTHAL, Sunlight Foundation: In 2008, during his reelection campaign, which is really when this debate began, he raised well over a million dollars only from the health insurance sector. That's a pretty astounding amount for somebody who's going to have a central role in this debate.

NARRATOR: In all, Baucus received more than $2.5 million from special interest groups in the health industry.

CECI CONNOLLY: What the campaign contributions often do is that they open doors. They give industries entree to important congressional staffers and lawmakers.
[www.pbs.org: Follow the campaign contributions]

NARRATOR: Privately, Ignagni pushed Baucus for a bill that would include the mandate to buy insurance and kill the public option. That didn't sit well with the president's liberal supporters.

HOWARD DEAN, Chair, Democratic Nat'l Cmte., 2005-09: The Senate bill, you know, frankly, is just an insurance company bill. The insurance companies, actually, literally did write it. There were two senior staffers in Max Baucus's office, one who used to work for United Health Care and one who used to work for WellPoint, who wrote the bill. It's a great bill from the insurance companies' point of view. It doesn't happen to do a whole lot to change the system and to bring reform.

NARRATOR: The left counterattacked at a hearing in May.

NEWSCASTER: Going to take you live to a Senate Finance Committee hearing looking at health care.

Sen. MAX BAUCUS (D-MT), Finance Committee Chairman: The committee will come back to order!

NARRATOR: Liberal outrage arrived in Baucus's own hearing room, as health care activists, one after another, shouted him down.

PROTESTER: With all respect to Senator Baucus, this hearing is public, but the public is not being heard.

PROTESTER: There's millions for the insurance industry, the HMOs and the pharmaceutical companies, and you're denying the people a voice!

PROTESTER: We want a seat at the table.

PROTESTER: Why are their voices not being heard? Every health care lobbyist in America is at the table!

NARRATOR: The activists were especially angry that Ignagni had a seat at the table but they did not.

MARGARET FLOWERS, M.D., Physicians for a Nat'l Health Prgm.: When we received the list of the dates of the hearings and who was being invited, and we saw who was invited, we requested that we have one person invited in the, you know, series of three hearings. They were inviting 41 people total to testify. And they said no.

Sen. MAX BAUCUS: Committee will be in order. The committee will stand in recess until the police can restore order.

KAREN IGNAGNI: I thought Senator Baucus did a spectacular job of handling that, not getting rattled in any way, handling it in a not only very professional way but an empathetic way.

NARRATOR: Baucus himself declined to discuss his role with FRONTLINE.

NEWSCASTER: Five people were arrested at a Senate Finance Committee meeting hearing on health care reform and charged with disruption-

NEWSCASTER: So what Chairman Baucus has decided, this option cannot be part of the discussion at a Senate hearing? I think that's wrong. I don't think it's fair!

NARRATOR: That spring, Baucus and the White House were also secretly negotiating another deal, this time with the pharmaceutical industry. Their top lobbyist was a classic Washington character.

CECI CONNOLLY: Billy Tauzin is a New Orleans politician, a very colorful, lively figure who took over the pharmaceutical industry trade group, PhRMA.

Rep. MICHAEL BURGESS (R), Texas: Billy Tauzin is a formidable negotiator. And Billy Tauzin knows how things work on the Hill, and he knows how things work in this town.

NARRATOR: His most notorious act took place when then Congressman Tauzin and Senator Baucus pushed through a Medicare prescription drug bill.

Rep. BILLY TAUZIN (R), Louisiana: We are about to pass a $400 billion insured drug account for these citizens who have no drug insurance today.

NARRATOR: In 2003, in the middle of the night, Tauzin kept the House voting machine open until he could scrounge and wheedle just enough votes to pass the controversial measure.

Sen. SHERROD BROWN (D-OH), Health Committee: It was a payoff to two industries, the drug industry and the insurance industry. There was no question about it. They did very, very well out of this bill.

NARRATOR: It meant hundreds of billions of dollars for the pharmaceutical industry.
Rep. DAN BURTON (R), Indiana: The comptroller general said when we passed the Medicare prescription drug bill that it was the worst piece of legislation, fiscally, that he had ever seen. And he said over time, it was going to be a disaster.

NARRATOR: It continues to be a classic Washington story of money and behind-closed-doors maneuvering. It made Tauzin's reputation.

Rep. MICHAEL BURGESS (R), Texas: You know, smart money's always going to be on Billy Tauzin in a negotiation because he knows what he's doing.

NARRATOR: And just over a year later, Tauzin was hired as the pharmaceutical industry's top lobbyist.

Rep. DAN BURTON: Billy got a very good job with PhRMA. I think he makes around $2 million a year. At least, that's what I've been told. Many of his staff people went with him or went to work for pharmaceutical companies. And Billy was the main pusher of the bill.

NARRATOR: In the 2008 presidential campaign, the incident became one of Barack Obama's favorite complaints about the Washington political culture.

Sen. BARACK OBAMA, Presidential Candidate: And you know what? The chairman of the committee who pushed the law through went to work for the pharmaceutical industry making $2 million a year. Imagine that. That's an example of the same old game playing in Washington. You know, I don't want to learn how to play the game better, I want to put an end to the game playing.

NARRATOR: But secretly, one year later at Max Baucus's Senate office, the Obama White House was negotiating with Billy Tauzin.

PETER BAKER: It's a very Rahm Emanuel idea, get them at the table, make them agree to something with the threat that something worse could be out there if they don't. And once you get this buy-in, that should eliminate pockets of opposition.

NARRATOR: Billy Tauzin knew that during the presidential campaign, Barack Obama had promised to slash drug prices.

CECI CONNOLLY: PhRMA had some real concerns that there would be an effort by the Democrats to enable the government to negotiate for its prices on Medicare prescription drugs, and this could be potentially a very big hit to the industry.

NARRATOR: Tauzin also knew the White House was eager for any early deal that appeared to contain costs.

JOHN PODESTA, Co-Chair, Obama Transition, 2008-09: I think he was smart in saying that "If I get in early, I can make a deal that my members can live with."

NARRATOR: He proposed a complicated formula which he said would cut drug costs by $80 billion over 10 years. White House aide Jim Messina took the deal to the Oval Office. Emanuel and Obama believed there was an implicit threat attached. If they didn't agree to the deal, Billy Tauzin could do real damage.

DAVID NEXON, Sr. Adviser to Sen. Kennedy, 1983-05: From the point of view of Obama and the Finance Committee, it's a huge advantage to have this interest group on your side.

CECI CONNOLLY: PhRMA certainly had deep enough pockets to do some real damage advertising-wise if it wanted to.

RYAN LIZZA, The New Yorker: If you can stop $100 million from being spent to attack your plan, that looks very- you know, that's not such a bad deal.

NARRATOR: But taking the deal meant the president would back off his campaign promise to dramatically cut drug prices.

TOM DASCHLE: We talked about it. It's always been my practice not to reveal conversations I've had with the president or people in the White House.

NARRATOR: Tom Daschle continued to visit the Oval Office in an unofficial capacity.

TOM DASCHLE: The president saw it as an opportunity to seize the moment, you know, to get signatures on the line, to say, "This looks like an opportunity we haven't had before. So let's lock them in to the extent we can. I'm going to seize the moment."

DAN PFEIFFER, White House Communications Director: They brought stuff to the table and were willing to work with us. And the president said that having people at the table is better than having them throwing stuff at the table.

INTERVIEWER: But not an easy thing to do?

DAN PFEIFFER: No, certainly not. Certainly not. And went in with full eyes open that there are going to be people in our party who would be critical of that.

NARRATOR: The president accepted the deal.

RYAN LIZZA: There's always two sides of Obama. You have to have the sort of inspirational message. You have to have something to lift up people. But at the end of the day, when you're passing legislation, it is about deal making. There's no other way to do it.

NARRATOR: In June, the president announced the broad outlines of the PhRMA deal. He did not mention what he had given up to get it.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: [June 22, 2009] This is a significant breakthrough on the road to health care reform, one that will make the difference in the lives of many older Americans.
NARRATOR: It didn't take long for the secret to leak.

NEWSCASTER: Another day, another headache for President Obama.
PROTESTER: Is this just the dirty reality of politics?

PROTESTER: News of a back room deal riled fellow Democrats.

NARRATOR: Once again, it was the liberals in the president's own party who began to criticize the deal.

NEWSCASTER: There's also growing concern that the Obama administration secretly made concessions to drug companies.

PETER BAKER, The New York Times: The liberals were watching what was going on with increasing alarm because what they saw was the new White House getting in bed with the people that they thought they had been fighting against for all these years.

NEWSCASTER: Obama's rewarded the drug companies in a big way.

PROTESTER: What did the pharmaceutical industry get in return?

JOHN PODESTA: I think people who thought that the pharmaceutical industry was still reaping profits that were excessive were unhappy with that deal and were particularly unhappy that it got cut behind closed doors.

PETER BAKER: It was a wake-up call, really, to a lot of liberals that President Obama wasn't everything that they thought he was.

NARRATOR: For months, the president had been doing deals- insurance and pharmaceuticals, Now it was time to write a bill and to fulfill another campaign promise, to create a Washington beyond partisan politics.

DAN BALZ: A bipartisan outcome, even in a minimalist sense, was certainly a very, very high priority of President Obama.

NARRATOR: Again, Max Baucus would have to be the point man. Getting through his Senate Finance Committee would be the crucial test.

PETER BAKER: If they could get five, ten Republicans, that would have been enough. And Max Baucus was, they thought, their key to getting that.

NARRATOR: Baucus had a close relationship with the ranking Republican, Chuck Grassley.

Sen. CHARLES GRASSLEY (R-IA), Finance Committee: Senator Baucus and I were still working on what we thought ought to be a- not just a bipartisan bill but a kind of a consensus bill. In other words, something that would get 75 or 80 votes.

NARRATOR: But others said they saw nothing for the Republican Party in Baucus's proposals.

Sen. ORRIN HATCH (R-UT), Finance Committee: I found myself coming out of those secret meetings, those private meetings, and criticizing virtually everything they were doing. So I talked to Max, I talked to Chuck Grassley and others and said, "Look, I don't think I can support this."

NARRATOR: And from the beginning, Grassley was under intense pressure from his own party.

JONATHAN COHN, Sr. Editor, The New Republic: Charles Grassley is in line for a committee chairmanship. The Republican Party plays hardball with its members. I think the message got through that he was jeopardizing his standing in the party by playing too nice with health care reform.

MIKE MYERS, Sr. Adviser to Sen. Kennedy, 1998-09: It became clear that the Republican game plan was going to be just to say no, to deny this president any victories.

JONATHAN COHN: There was enormous pressure from the Republican leadership. They did not want to be part of this. They did not want to make a deal. The word went out.

DAN PFEIFFER: You had the Senate leadership in Mitch McConnell and John Kyl saying, "Don't get involved. This is going to be the president's Waterloo. It's our way to win back the Congress."

NARRATOR: And as the summer wore on, winning Grassley over became harder and harder for Baucus.

JOHN PODESTA: The process, particularly in the Finance Committee, just felt like that race that was being run starting on January 20th all of a sudden hit some mud, and people's shoes got pretty soggy and pretty heavy.

Rep. MICHAEL BURGESS (R), Texas: Everything kind of bogged down. I mean, here we were on this march to produce this bill and at least get it through the House floor before the August recess, and all the wheels came off.

NARRATOR: Impatient, Emanuel began a campaign to convince the president to change course, to scale back their ambitions.

RYAN LIZZA: Rahm Emanuel is all about, as he says, putting points on the board. Just get a deal and get it over with.

DAVID GERGEN: Rahm was the guy who was skeptical about trying to go for major comprehensive health care reform. He saw what happened. He was there during the Clinton debacle. He knows how much it takes out of a presidency.

DAN PFEIFFER: It was entirely a conversation of feasibility. Option A, pass the comprehensive bill. Option B, smaller bill. And option C, which no one would entertain, would be to do nothing.

NARRATOR: The president made the final decision.

RYAN LIZZA: Obama weighed in and said, "No, I want to try and get what I campaigned on. I want to try and get the full bill."

NARRATOR: But Congress was in no hurry.

NEWSCASTER: Some members of Congress telling the president to slow down, don't push so hard.

NEWSCASTER: They don't like timetables over there at the Finance Committee.

NARRATOR: By August, as Congress headed home for the summer recess, there was still no bill. Some in Washington wondered whether health care reform could survive the recess.

PETER BAKER: Heading into the summer recess is a period of great frustration for the White House. Everything was getting stuck. Everything was sort of slowing down. And as they head into August, they don't recognize what's about to hit them.

PROTESTER: You want to kill my grandparents, you come through me first!

PROTESTER: God will take care of health care.

PROTESTER: You dirty thieves!

PROTESTER: We can't afford it!

PROTESTER: Afro-Leninism!

NARRATOR: Angry citizens, stoked by economic fears, outraged about bail-outs and expanding government-

PROTESTER: The things that Obama's doing are the exact things that Hitler did.

PROTESTER: No public option!

NARRATOR: -focused their rage on the health care bill.

Rep. MICHAEL BURGESS: Boom, the summer town halls literally blow up in our faces.

PROTESTER: Radical communists and socialists!

Rep. MICHAEL BURGESS: The fat really hit the fire when we went home in August for what usually is a fairly leisurely stroll through the district-

PROTESTER: Yes, we can!

Rep. MICHAEL BURGESS: -a town hall here-

PROTESTER: Baby killer! Abortion is murder!

Rep. MICHAEL BURGESS: -a summer parade there, an ice cream social here. No, it was all health care all the time. And people were- were red hot about it. It was a radioactive issue all summer.

PROTESTER: We won't pay for murder!

NEWSCASTER: The surprise is just how out of hand these town hall meetings are getting-

NEWSCASTER: There is an ugliness with these fringe people who are comparing the president to Hitler.

KENNETH VOGEL, Politico: This opposition was real. And this opposition rose up. And this opposition let individual members of Congress from across the country know that they had problems with this health care plan.

JOHN PODESTA: In that first week of August, the anger was spilling out. It was spilling out so much that guns were spilling out of people's coat pockets at town hall meetings.

TOWN HALL PROTESTER: I'm not a lobbyist with all kind of money to stuff in your pocket!

JOHN PODESTA: And I think that the members themselves were a bit taken aback by the intensity of that anger.

TOWN HALL PROTESTER: -and the rest of your damned cronies up on the Hill! _[applause]

PETER BAKER: There was anger out there, and members of Congress listened and they were scared.

JONATHAN COHN: We had this horrible backlash. I mean, there were moments in August when it looked like it was done, this was the end of health care reform.

NARRATOR: Senator Grassley, the swing man in the president and Max Baucus's bipartisan strategy, felt the fire from his conservative base.

Sen. CHARLES GRASSLEY: I had people come to my town meeting with sheets of paper that thick off the Internet and quoting from the bill. You know, I've never had that happen before. People were up on it, and people didn't like what they were reading.

TOWN HALL PROTESTER: Democrat or Republican or whoever, senator or congressman, voted this bill, we will vote you out! [cheers]

PETER BAKER: Suddenly, the idea of cutting a deal with President Obama no longer looked like it was good politics, no longer looked like it was good policy.

Sen. CHARLES GRASSLEY: There's a bill out of the House of Representatives put together under Speaker Pelosi's leadership. I'm- I'm- [boos] I am- I'm- I would not vote for that. [applause]

RYAN LIZZA: It's not a profile in courage. It's someone who becomes convinced that health care, if he supports it in any version, will end his career politically down the road.

PETER BAKER: Once they sort of lost Grassley, they lost arguably their last chance to really get a bipartisan bill.

PROTESTERS: Kill the bill! Kill the bill! Kill the bill!

NARRATOR: Just as the town hall anger was reaching its boiling point, the president received more bad news.

NEWSCASTER: Senator Edward Moore Kennedy, the patriarch of the Kennedy clan, has died.

NEWSCASTER: The last in the line of this extraordinary American dynasty is gone.

NEWSCASTER: Last night, an American political era came to an end.

NARRATOR: The most passionate advocate of health care reform was dead, but some believed Kennedy's death might change the tone of the debate.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Ted Kennedy's life work was not to champion the causes of those with wealth or power or special connections, it was to give to give a voice to those who were not heard.

PETER BAKER: It was an emotional rallying point for Democrats for a while- "Win this for Teddy" kind of thinking.

CECI CONNOLLY: Some people thought, "Well, gosh, maybe in memory of Senator Kennedy, some of these old Republican friends of his would rejoin the effort."

NARRATOR: The president would redouble his efforts to achieve Kennedy's dream.

JOHN PODESTA: After consulting with a number of people, including Senator Daschle and others, I think the president concluded, "I need to take back control of this."

CECI CONNOLLY: They know that their most powerful tool is Barack Obama- always has been, probably always will be.

JOHN PODESTA: His audience really in that speech wasn't the public in general, it was the people sitting in that chamber.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: [September 9, 2009] The time for bickering is over. The time for games has passed. Now is the season for action! Now is when we must bring the best ideas of both parties together and show the American people that we can still do what we were sent here to do!

PETER BAKER: It was an attempt to sort of recapture the high ground. It was an attempt to, you know, bring the debate back to a loftier level.

NARRATOR: But the tone immediately sunk to a new low.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: There are also those who claim that our reform efforts would insure illegal immigrants. This, too, is false. The reforms - the reforms I'm proposing would not apply to those who are here illegally.

Rep. JOE WILSON (R), South Carolina: You lie!

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Not true.

PETER BAKER: A lone congressman says,"You lie"

Rep. JOE WILSON: You lie!

NARRATOR: It was Republican representative Joe Wilson from South Carolina.

PETER BAKER: -crystallized this moment in Washington. It crystallized the anger. It crystallized the fervor of the opposition.

MIKE MYERS: I was in the chamber when the speech was being given, and there was a gasp on both sides of the aisle.

Sen. ORRIN HATCH: I was upset with that. That was inappropriate. I was sitting there and I thought, "What in the world? Why would anybody do something like that?"

NEWSCASTER: -an outburst that continues to reverberate across the country.

Sen. JOHN McCAIN (R), Arizona: Totally disrespectful, no place for it.

RUSH LIMBAUGH, Radio Talk Show Host: He is lying, President Obama is, from the moment he opens his mouth until he ends the speech!

COMMENTATOR: How did we get to a point where it's OK to yell "You lie" at the president while he's speaking to Congress?

NARRATOR: The effort to forge a bipartisan agreement was for all practical purposes over. Now the president would turn to the Democrats. They pressured Max Baucus. Emanuel wanted a bill ASAP.

Sen. ORRIN HATCH: They just ignored Max in the end. They just felt they could ram this right through and to heck with Republicans, to heck with conservatives.

CECI CONNOLLY: I don't think Rahm Emanuel ever worried much about bipartisanship. He was focused on winning.

NARRATOR: Senate majority leader Harry Reid would take control of the bill. Talk of a public option was back. The mandates the insurance industry had fought for were watered down. Karen Ignagni didn't like what that might mean for the bottom line.

KAREN IGNAGNI, Pres., America's Health Insurance Plans: I was concerned about what we were seeing from our actuaries, what we were seeing from our economists. We were very concerned about what was happening.

DAN BALZ, The Washington Post: And the insurance companies at that point decided, "We've got to fight back on this."

NEWSCASTER: -America's Health Insurance Plans said the finance bill could result in dramatically higher insurance premiums.

NEWSCASTER: The insurers are trying to scuttle the health care bill.

NEWSCASTER: White House officials today said they feel broadsided.

NARRATOR: At the White House, they decided a war with the insurance industry was just what the doctor ordered. In his weekly Internet address, the president let them have it.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: The insurance industry is rolling out the big guns and breaking out their massive war chest to marshal their forces for one last fight to save the status quo.

DAN PFEIFFER: It's always great to have an enemy in politics. There's no question about that. However, we didn't pick the insurance companies as the enemy, they decided to play that role when they decided to spend tens of millions of dollars to defeat health reform.
[www.pbs.org: Read Pfeiffer's Interview]

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: They're flooding Capitol Hill with lobbyists and campaign contributions. And they're funding studies designed to mislead the American people.

KAREN IGNAGNI: I have a hearing disability. I wear a hearing aid. And I didn't have my hearing aid in, and I thought to myself, "This can't be true." I ran around looking for my hearing aid because I was sure that I was mishearing, not hearing it correctly.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: It's smoke and mirrors. It's bogus. And it's all too familiar.

NARRATOR: Karen Ignagni and her allies fought back.

TELEVISION COMMERCIAL: New, hidden taxes that Congress wants on your health care, hidden health care taxes on medicines, medical devices and health insurance.

NARRATOR: They secretly funneled millions of dollars to a tough ad campaign by the Chamber of Commerce.

TELEVISION COMMERCIAL: Call Congress. Tell them no hidden health care taxes in a recession.

NARRATOR: And powerful senators stepped up to support her cause.

CECI CONNOLLY, Co-Author, Landmark: There were still some- Senator Lieberman was one, Senator Nelson of Nebraska was another- who still said there's merit to what the insurance industry is saying. And those were critical swing votes.

NARRATOR: Emanuel and Harry Reid were now doing deals just to win over Democrats. They killed the public option, pleasing Senator Lieberman and others. They lowered proposed taxes for medical device makers for Evan Bayh. The final hold-out was the Democrat from Nebraska, former insurance executive Ben Nelson.

PETER BAKER: Ben Nelson is one of the more conservative members of the Democratic caucus in the Senate, and they needed his vote. They had to have his vote.

CECI CONNOLLY: That meant sitting down and hammering out a deal, really giving him almost what he wanted, anything he wanted.

HOWARD DEAN: The focus at the end of a bill like this is always about how you're going to get those last two or three votes. And compromises are made and thrown at senators' feet in order to get them to vote.

NARRATOR: In Nelson's case, the cost was $100 million. The costs of expanding Nebraska's Medicaid would be covered by the U.S. taxpayers.

Sen. ORRIN HATCH: To a lot of us, we were very, very upset about it. It was very poorly done. But the only way they could get it through was basically to bribe their members.

NARRATOR: Senator Nelson denied there was a quid pro quo for his vote, saying instead he was opening the door for all states to receive similar Medicaid compensations. But Washington and the media saw it differently ... they called it the "Cornhusker kickback."

RUSH LIMBAUGH: Prostitution has been legalized in Washington, D.C.!

COMMENTATOR: Is this deal for Ben Nelson forever and ever, amen? Forever and ever and only for Nebraska?

COMMENTATOR: You've got to compliment Ben Nelson for playing The Price is Right.

DAVID GERGEN: It's not a pretty process. There is deal making. That's the way it's been done for a long time. But those deals done in your front parlor can be pretty smelly. The public was already up to here with what they were seeing in Washington, and I think it just put them over the side.

Sen. ORRIN HATCH: That was very sour stuff to most people in this country. They realized that this is not the way to legislate.

SENATE CLERK: Mr. McConnell, no. Mr. Menendez?

Sen. ROBERT MENENDEZ (D), New Jersey: Aye.

NEWSCASTER: The Senate convened to send President Obama a hard-fought Christmas present.

SENATE CLERK: Ms. Murkowski.

Sen. LISA MURKOWSKI (R), Alaska: No.

NEWSCASTER: -its first roll call vote on Christmas Eve since 1895.

SENATE CLERK: Mr. Nelson of Nebraska.

Sen. BEN NELSON (D), Nebraska: Aye.

Vice Pres. JOE BIDEN: The ayes are 60, the nays are 39. HR 3590 is passed.

NEWSCASTER: Tonight, the ayes have it. The Senate passes an historic health care bill.

NEWSCASTER: This was a strictly party-line vote, all the Democrats voting yes, all the Republicans voting no, the final tally 60 to 39.

CECI CONNOLLY: On Christmas morning, everyone was sitting around thinking that he was an LBJ-like genius because it appeared that he was on the verge of accomplishing what no president had for 70 years.

SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, The New York Times: They were so close. They were inches away from getting this bill.

PETER BAKER: They had 60 votes on record in the Senate. They had the House bill in hand. The Emerald City was right there in the distance.

NARRATOR: The White House wasn't paying attention, but up in Massachusetts, that "Cornhusker kickback" was still hanging in the air. It was almost election day. At stake was Ted Kennedy's Senate seat.

NEWSCASTER: The polling numbers are all over the place.

NEWSCASTER: This could be a breakthrough for the Republicans.

NEWSCASTER: I think the headline in The Boston Herald this morning says it all- "Mass hysteria."

NARRATOR: A political newcomer was on the verge of taking a seat the president was counting on to pass health care reform.

NEWSCASTER: Republican Scott Brown is riding a wave.

NEWSCASTER: Brown's campaign language has the aura of a revolutionary crusade.

SCOTT BROWN (R-MA), Senate Candidate: Business as usual is not the business we like, and all those back room deals from Nebraska and others - it's just wrong, and we can do better! [cheers]

PETER BAKER: Scott Brown effectively used that as a way of saying that change has not come to Washington.

NARRATOR: The Democrat, Martha Coakley, was sinking in the polls.

PETER BAKER: Only belatedly does it dawn on the White House what's about to happen. The president's not going to go up there to campaign for her until the Friday before the election, when Martha Coakley calls David Axelrod personally, and says,"I need him to come up."

CECI CONNOLLY: They frantically sent Obama up to Massachusetts the weekend before.

PETER BAKER: He makes very clear to the Massachusetts electorate what's at stake here is the Obama presidency, and do they want to hand the Republicans the power to stop his agenda on health care, on everything else?

NARRATOR: By election day, the president knew they would lose.

CECI CONNOLLY: January 19th, 6:30 PM, about an hour-and-a-half before the polls close in Massachusetts, Obama calls for Pelosi, Reid, Biden and Rahm Emanuel to come to the Oval Office.

NARRATOR: They immediately convened an emergency meeting.

DAN PFEIFFER: From the very moment that it was clear that Scott Brown was going to win that seat, he began thinking through what the next steps would be to be able to right the ship and get health care done.

NARRATOR: The president asked Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi if she could get the House to pass the Senate bill.

CECI CONNOLLY: Pelosi is annoyed and quite adamant that there's no way she can sell that to her House members, almost kind of lecturing, saying, "You don't understand the realities in the House. This won't work." And Obama finally snaps, uncharacteristically for him, and he says, "I understand that, Nancy. What's your suggestion?" And there is no suggestion.

DAN PFEIFFER: We went from, basically, beginning to plan how and when the president would sign the bill to if we could even resuscitate the bill.

NEWSCASTER: Scott Brown is the winner of the Massachusetts United States Senate race.

NEWSCASTER: Brown's victory shakes up Massachusetts and it shakes up the nation!

NEWSCASTER: -Republican taking over the seat that Ted Kennedy held for 46 years.

CAMPAIGN WORKER: Here he is, the United States Senator from Massachusetts, Scott Brown!

Sen.-Elect SCOTT BROWN: People do not want the trillion-dollar health care plan that is being forced- [cheers]

Sen. CHARLES GRASSLEY: In one election was a composite of all that ill feeling from the grass roots of America. And if it can be expressed in liberal Massachusetts, they know it's a lot worse in Montana and Wyoming.

[www.pbs.org: More of Sen. Grassley's interview]

Sen. ORRIN HATCH: If they replace the so-called Kennedy seat with a Republican, then my gosh, you'd better wake up.

NARRATOR: The president's supermajority was gone. The Republicans now had their 41st vote.

The worst blizzards in history buried Washington in February.

NEWSCASTER: Getting a health care bill passed now looks more difficult than ever.

NEWSCASTER: All of the options for health care get very ugly.

NARRATOR: It closed the government.

NEWSCASTER: I don't see any way you go forward from here with health care.

NEWSCASTER: They're shell-shocked.

NEWSCASTER: They're going to need a whole new strategy on health care reform.

NARRATOR: Barack Obama was coming to terms with what looked like his first significant failure as president.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: This is a complex issue. And the longer it was debated, the more skeptical people became. I take my share of blame for not explaining it more clearly to the American people.

DAN PFEIFFER: The process was messy, and so it turned people off. It ended up being behind closed doors. It was filled with a lot of partisan wrangling, people yelling at each other across the table. We ended up having a process that represented a lot of what the American people hated about Washington.

DAN BALZ: The president is in some ways kind of rebalancing himself. The year had been very hard on him. The Massachusetts defeat symbolically was terrible, and practically, had a devastating effect.

NEWSCASTER: The president admitted he's made some mistakes in his first year in office, but said he won't quit.

NEWSCASTER: A chastened U.S. president Barack Obama concedes he's made some mistakes in his first year in office.

NEWSCASTER: He's got an uphill fight here.

NARRATOR: While the country waited, Obama formulated a new plan. He would personally sell the bill to Congress and the American people.

DAN PFEIFFER: The president said to us that he would do anything, he will call anyone, meet with anyone, he will speak anywhere, he will do whatever it takes to make the case. He was going to have to be the primary spokesperson for health reform. He was going to have to force action.

NARRATOR: He deployed Rahm Emanuel to work with Speaker Pelosi. They would try to get enough Democrats on board to push through the Senate bill.

CECI CONNOLLY: They realized that their political operation had come way off the tracks and they needed to quickly right that operation.

NARRATOR: They began their comeback by staging a showdown with the Republicans out in the open, on national television.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: [February 25, 2010] I'm looking forward to listening.

NEWSCASTER: The president is gathering House and Senate leaders, Democrats and Republicans, to try to save health care reform.

NEWSCASTER: It's a high-stakes gamble that could be all or nothing for the president.
Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Everybody please have a seat.

DAN PFEIFFER: The summit was an opportunity to hit the restart button on how people viewed the process, to do it all on live on TV, open for the American people to see, make them feel more comfortable with the process.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Here's the bottom line. We all know this is urgent.

SHERYL GAY STOLBERG: Suddenly, the president was in the driver's seat.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: This became a very ideological battle.

CECI CONNOLLY: They needed to show that Obama was back in charge.

NARRATOR: Political theater. One by one, he took on Republicans.

Sen. LAMAR ALEXANDER (R), Tennessee: The Congressional Budget Office report says that premiums will rise.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: No, no, no, no, Lamar. This is an example of where we've got to get our facts straight. Let me respond to what you just said Lamar, because it's not factually accurate.

DAN BALZ: That was, I think, the moment that he stepped up in a way that he hadn't before.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Let's- let me just make this point, John, because we're not campaigning anymore. The election's over.

Sen. JOHN MCCAIN (R), Arizona: I'm reminded of that every day. [laughter]

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Yeah.

DAN BALZ: There's no question that there was a change in his style. He took ownership of this health care issue. He challenged everybody on this front.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: -of how we actually get a bill done.

NARRATOR: And then for a month, Barack Obama the campaigner hit the road to sell the bill.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Do not quit! Do not give up! We keep on going! We are going to get this done! We are going to make history! We are going to fix health care in America with your help! God bless you! And God bless the United States of America! [cheers]

NARRATOR: On Sunday, March 21st, the president waited to see whether he had convinced just enough members of his own party to push the bill through.

NEWSCASTER: -down to the wire on health care reform. The House votes just hours from now.

NEWSCASTER: After months of rancor in the streets, the vote takes place in just a few hours.

DAN PFEIFFER: Sitting in the Roosevelt Room, the president, the vice president- we sat- there was a small bit of anxiety as we watched the votes tick up. We've had victory snatched from us before.

REPRESENTATIVE: On this vote, the yeas are 219, the nays are 212. The motion is adopted.

SHERYL GAY STOLBERG: When the 216th vote comes over, a big cheer erupts.

NEWSCASTER: It's 219 to 212. No votes from Republicans.

NEWSCASTER: -all Democrats, no Republicans.

NEWSCASTER: This is a huge victory for this president.

NEWSCASTER: For decades, they've been trying to do it. It has now been done.

Pres. BARACK OBAMA: Good evening, everybody. This legislation will not fix everything that ails our health care system, but it moves us decisively in the right direction. This is what change looks like.

NARRATOR: It was victory, but experienced Washington knew the president would pay for it.

CECI CONNOLLY: It came at a high price, the entire first year basically dedicated to this, having their hopes for bipartisanship dashed. And the White House still is not certain how this will sell in the country.

DAN BALZ: There is a realism that it has come with a cost. We don't know what's going to happen in the November elections. We don't know what's going to happen in 2012. But there's no question that this health care battle has put his party at risk, and how they deal with that is the next chapter. But this was a historic moment.

----------------------------------------------

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posted april 13, 2010; updated april 23, 2010

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Tuesday, July 16, 2019

The Roots of Country Music in America - Appalachia to Nashville


Most people probably have little understanding of the roots of country music in America because it has always been taken for granted that country is one of the core genres we have always had around. It is known as the heartbeat and soul of America and been around about as long as the Europeans have been here.

Over the years we may have heard country music we liked, some even crossed over to pop and rock charts, and many stars in other genres either started as country music singers or became famous and then cut a country song or album. But do we really know from whence it came?



When English speaking America was first being colonized in the 1600's the coastal areas were settled first, Virginia, Massachusetts and Maryland, all by 1634 and it did not take long for the European immigrants to make their way to the Appalachian Mountains, the Southern Appalachians that is, which included the Blue Ridge Mountain range and Cumberland Plateau. Western Virginia and Eastern Kentucky and Tennessee territories along with pieces of the Carolinas and Georgia made up the region which served as a barrier to westward expansion.

Immigrants came to the area because the coastal regions were already populated and with them came the Old World musical instruments were brought together in barn dances and celebrations by these hardy people settling the region. This was in the days before electricity, before electric guitars and synthesizers



The Irish fiddle, German dulcimer, Italian mandolin, Spanish guitar and African banjo were brought to these celebrations and played together in hillbilly jam sessions far from the operas and symphonies of the cities on the east coast. This came to be known as "Old Time" music.

In the 19th century some immigrant groups moved to the Texas area to settle and further integrated the hillbilly sound with Spanish, Mexican and Native American music and large dance halls were built where the locals could gather and dance to the sounds. This was the final step in the evolution of the roots of Country Music.

Then came the 20th century with cars and roads and radio which brought down the barriers of communication and people from throughout the nation could hear this unique American creation. The first country recording was in 1921 and throughout the 1920's as radio expanded so did the country music.



Country musicians were great innovators ever since mixing the instruments from five counties up in the Appalachians and electricity, recording and touring gave them more and more opportunities to do this. Hillbilly music grew in popularity driven by the Carter Family and Jimmy Rodgers and in 1925 WSM-AM radio in Nashville started the first country music broadcast, on November 28, 1925, when the WSM Barn Dance was first broadcast. In time it would become the Grand Ole Opry under the guidance of people like Roy Acuff.

By the 1930's and Great Depression people were poor and the radio became the primary source of news and entertainment. Soon a fledgling movie industry introduced the Singing cowboys while radio was expanding the barn dances with legendary country shows being broadcast from Chicago to Texas to California. In the 1940's these shows introduced singers like Roy Acuff, Bill Haley, Eddie Arnold and singing cowboys like Gene Autry and Roy Rogers.



Bob Wills and his legendary Texas Playboys was among the innovators of country music when in 1935 he introduced drums to the band, a first, then became the first group with the electric guitar in 1938. Yet it was not until the early 1960's that the steel guitar and drums were fixtures in country bands.

Hillbilly music spawned Hillbilly Boogie by 1939 and a new country genre called Bluegrass emerged with the sound of Bill Monroe, Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs at the end World War II. By this time country music included Hillbilly, Boogie, Blues, Honky Tonk, Gospel and Rockabilly.



To the rest of the world country music was called Hillbilly until 1944 when the name was changed to Folk and Blues music. By 1949 it was labeled Country or Country Western, the latter referring to the singing cowboys of movies and then television. Honky Tonk saw the rise of Ernest Tubb, Floyd Tillman, the Maddox Brothers and Rose, Lefty Frizell and Hank Williams.



Along came the 1950's and country music changed again as Rockabilly dominated with Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash and Carl Perkins leading the way. From 1955-1960 ABC-TV became the first network with a nationwide country show called the Ozark Jubilee that showcased country stars to the nation. Elvis helped drive the cross-over between Rockabilly and Rock 'n Roll.



Late in the '50's came the Lubbock Sound of Buddy Holly and then there was a country backlash as the industry felt rock 'n roll was to dominate. Ray Price, Marty Robbins and Johnny Horton began to shift the music back to traditional country.


In the early 1960's the Nashville sound became dominant with producers like Chet Atkins, Owen Bradley and Billy Sherrill reviving the genre with legendary singers Patsy Cline, Jim Reeves and Eddy Arnold. Ray Charles introduced Country Soul in 1962 with his release of I Can't Stop Loving You. A new sound in Nashville called Countrypolitan was created featuring the sounds of Tammy Wynette and Charlie Rich. But soon the Nashville sound became stale.

Out west Honky Tonk and Western Swing were merged by Bob Wills and Lefty Frizell to form the Bakersfield Sound. It would encompass the diversity of different styles from Buck Owens, Merle Haggard, Tommy Collins and Wynn Stewart.



In other places like Lubbock, Tulsa and Austin the disappointment with the Nashville Sound and control of the record labels was causing an Outlaw movement. Inspired by the success of The Beatles, Bob Dylan and Rolling Stones in demanding creative control of their music and control of their songs, the Outlaws gravitated to Austin where Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson became the leaders.

Not only did their music change but their image as well. Gone were the clean cut, clean shaven cowboys of old and in were the long haired radical Outlaws of the future. Jessie Colter, wife of Waylon, was one of the female pioneers while Johnny Cash and Merle Haggard soon joined forces.

With The Beatles astounding success blending rock and pop music Nashville was hungry to tap into the crossover sound needed to reach the mainstream markets. Others, seeking a return to the "old values" of rock 'n roll, created a new genre called Country Rock.



The Byrds, Flying Burrito Brothers, Allman Brothers, Marshall Tucker Band, Poco, Buffalo Springfield and Eagles exploded onto the music scene as Southern Rock and Heartland became new subgenre spin offs. Ever since there has been a tug of war between traditional country and country rock or country pop as stars like Dolly Parton, Rosanne Cash, Linda Ronstadt, Juice Newton, Alabama, Hank Williams, Jr., Brooks and Dunn, Garth Brooks, Dwight Yoakum, Shania Twain, Faith Hill, and Keith Urban helped move country towards rock over the years.



By the mid 1970's Olivia Newton John and John Denver captured the Country Pop crossover market and powered their way to CMA and Grammy Awards with multi million selling hits. Soon a whole new group of country performers would take up the mantle.



George Straight, Alan Jackson, Clint Black, Toby Keith, Reba McEntire, Kenny Chesney, Alison Krauss, Vince Gill and Tim McGraw among others perform the Classic Country style today while the pop crossover comes from new artists like Carrie Underwood from American Idol fame and newest sensation Taylor Swift who have breathed new life into the country music industry.



What is next? Who knows. Still, those who understand that country music is an ever-changing genre that morphs into a variety of styles depending on the needs of the people and the innovation of the artists, must feel good as a broad range of artists currently dominate the radio airwaves and rule the concert circuit.


As the major record labels collapse, the radio stations strangle on their own automated programming and the formula music once again becomes stale we know it is the time when country music always rediscovers itself. Nashville will be a lot better as a result, all country artists will benefit, the public will reap the rewards of new and innovative country music and history will once again record that the American country sound once again became relevant in a time of need and a time of truth.
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Monday, July 15, 2019

Americans Abandon Voting - Barely 50% even participate - What democracy? What choices?


What the news media and political parties are not telling us about our $20 billion election next year?

Our media and politicians tend to portray the United States of America as the ultimate democracy in the world and have consistently presented us as the defenders of freedom and democracy.


Well I must be confused because nowhere is the word "democracy" mentioned in the Declaration of Independence or the U.S. Constitution. How could that be?  Come to think of it, no where are the words capitalism or political party mentioned either.


Our government is supposed to be a democracy!

What exactly is the definition of a democracy?


The Cambridge Dictionary - Definition of "democracy"

The belief in freedom and equality between people, or a system of government based on this belief, in which power is held by elected representatives or directly by the people themselves.

A country in which power is held by elected representatives.


The Cambridge Dictionary - Definition of "republic"

A country that is governed by elected representatives and an elected leader.

So in a pure democracy power is held by the people directly, while a republic elects representatives to look out for the public interest.  Well let us look at that in light of the current state of American participation in the election of our representatives and leader.


Pythagorean Analysis of Voter reality in America 2016 Presidential Election

Total USA Population 2016                323,127,513
Total Population under 18                  73,642,285
Total Population 18 and over          249,485,228

Total Eligible Voters 18+                 249,485,228

Total Registered Voters                    157,600,000
Percent                                                                     63%

Total Voter Turnout 2016                136,669,276
Percent of Registered Voters                         86%
Percent of Eligible Voters                                55%

Total Trump Votes 2016                    62,984,828
Percent of Registered Voters                        40%
Percent of Eligible Voters                              25.2%                                                                    
Total Clinton Voters 201                    65,853,514
Percent of Registered Voters                      41.7%
Percent of Eligible Voters                            26.3%                                    

Total Eligible Voters not Voting    112,816,048
Percent of Eligible Voters                            45.2%                                                



Total Leaning Independent                          39%
Total Leaning Democrat                               31%
                           Total Leaning Republican                            28%                           


Nothing can be more dramatic than the realization that not only do we not have a democracy we do not even have a functioning republic in this the citadel of world democracy.  We are nearing the point for perhaps the first time in our history, when more Americans refused to participate in the voting process by refusing to register to vote, a consequence of freedom or common sense I suspect.  Also note the foreboding 2018 party preference when the two parties continued to erode while the Independents continue to rise.

2018 Party Preference

Leaning Independent     42%
Leaning Democrat           30%
Leaning Republican        26%


Our political system has failed to support our constitutional requirements for a republic.  Wake up America!  Better yet, wake up news media and politicians who are ignorant of history and fail to understand the meaning of a republic.  As a last, gasp effort to steer them in the right direction, here is an explanation of the American system of government as envisioned by our founding fathers back before the concentration of power in our news media and political parties.


Is the United States a democracy?  Here is an explanation by ThisNation.com

The Pledge of Allegiance includes the phrase: "and to the republic for which it stands." Is the United States of America a republic? I always thought it was a democracy? What's the difference between the two?

The United States is, indeed, a republic, not a democracy. Accurately defined, a democracy is a form of government in which the people decide policy matters directly--through town hall meetings or by voting on ballot initiatives and referendums. A republic, on the other hand, is a system in which the people choose representatives who, in turn, make policy decisions on their behalf. 

The Framers of the Constitution were altogether fearful of pure democracy. Everything they read and studied taught them that pure democracies "have ever been spectacles of turbulence and contention; have ever been found incompatible with personal security or the rights of property; and have in general been as short in their lives as they have been violent in their deaths" (Federalist No. 10).


By popular usage, however, the word "democracy" come to mean a form of government in which the government derives its power from the people and is accountable to them for the use of that power. In this sense the United States might accurately be called a democracy. However, there are examples of "pure democracy" at work in the United States today that would probably trouble the Framers of the Constitution if they were still alive to see them. Many states allow for policy questions to be decided directly by the people by voting on ballot initiatives or referendums.

(Initiatives originate with, or are initiated by, the people while referendums originate with, or are referred to the people by, a state's legislative body.) That the Constitution does not provide for national ballot initiatives or referendums is indicative of the Framers' opposition to such mechanisms. They were not confident that the people had the time, wisdom or level-headedness to make complex decisions, such as those that are often presented on ballots on election day.

Writing of the merits of a republican or representative form of government, James Madison observed that one of the most important differences between a democracy and a republic is "the delegation of the government [in a republic] to a small number of citizens elected by the rest."


The primary effect of such a scheme, Madison continued, was to:

. . . refine and enlarge the public views by passing them through the medium of a chosen body of citizens whose wisdom may best discern the true interest of their country and whose patriotism and love of justice will be least likely to sacrifice it to temporary or partial considerations. Under such a regulation it may well happen that the public voice, pronounced by the representatives of the people, will be more consonant to the public good than if pronounced by the people themselves, convened for the same purpose (Federalist No. 10).

Later, Madison elaborated on the importance of "refining and enlarging the public views" through a scheme of representation:

There are particular moments in public affairs when the people, stimulated by some irregular passion, or some illicit advantage, or misled by the artful misrepresentations of interested men, may call for measures which they themselves will afterwards be most ready to lament and condemn. In these critical moments, how salutary will be the interference of some temperate and respectable body of citizens, in order to check the misguided career and to suspend the blow meditated by the people against themselves, until reason, justice and truth can regain their authority over the public mind (Federalist No. 63).


In the strictest sense of the word, the system of government established by the Constitution was never intended to be a "democracy." This is evident not only in the wording of the Pledge of Allegiance but in the Constitution itself which declares that "The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government" (Article IV, Section 4).  Moreover, the scheme of representation and the various mechanisms for selecting representatives established by the Constitution were clearly intended to produce a republic, not a democracy.


To the extent that the United States of America has moved away from its republican roots and become more "democratic," it has strayed from the intentions of the Constitution's authors. Whether or not the trend toward more direct democracy would be smiled upon by the Framers depends on the answer to another question. Are the American people today sufficiently better informed and otherwise equipped to be wise and prudent democratic citizens than were American citizens in the late 1700s? By all accounts, the answer to this second question is an emphatic "no."


Note Data Source for statistics: U.S. Bureau of the Census.