The Center for Public Integrity

PaperTrail BlogPaper Trail Blog

RSS Feed

Free-market cheerleaders have long relied on the flowchart to push their notion that government intervention makes a hash of things. Republican flowcharts helped knock the wind out of Clinton’s proposed health care reforms in the 1990s. And so it’s no surprise that opponents of President Obama’s health care reforms are once again pulling out charts.

Long before the Republican leadership released its flowchart of the plan put forward by House Democrats, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce unveiled its own chart comparing current regulation of health insurance plans to the confusion they claim would result from the House reform bill.

But a quick look at the Chamber analysis reveals links to the health insurance industry. To develop its chart, the Council turned to Leading Edge Policy and Strategy, a one-man shop run by Nandan Kenkeremath, a lobbyist and former Republican staffer at the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. After concluding a 17-year career with the committee in 2008, Kenkeremath in January 2009 registered as a lobbyist for United Health Group, the largest U.S. health insurer.

Reached for comment, Kenkeremath said his United Health Group link does not pose a conflict of interest or detract from the validity of the Chamber chart. Kenkeremath said he never lobbied on heath care reform legislation for United Health Group, although he added he is open to the possibility. Instead, he said, his one-month United Health project involved writing amendments directed at Obama’s economic stimulus plan.

“I don’t even think they think of me as a lobbyist,” Kenkeremath said, adding that his company focuses on policy work. “I registered out of an abundance of caution.”

Avram Goldstein, a researcher for the advocacy group Health Care for America Now, was not surprised at the link. “The insurance industry pays third-parties, shills, to keep its fingerprints off this work. It’s effective and it’s scaring people,” he said of the charts.

A spokesman for the Chamber declined to comment on the United Health link, saying its health policy experts were on vacation.

imageA section of the health insurance flow chart released by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Click for expanded view.

Follow the Center on Twitter and Facebook.

Add a comment Print this





  • Please enter the word you see in the image below:

  • Facebook

Comments

  1. There are no comments.

Add a comment

Do you have an opinion about this post?
Log in / Register to become part of the conversation!

Stay Connected

Subscribe to our e-mail newsletter and get the latest from our in-depth investigations, articles, interviews, blogs, videos, and more.

Support the Center

Your support will help us bring you more investigations, articles, interviews and news related materials relevant to U.S. politics and politics abroad.

Donate

About the Center

The Center for Public Integrity is dedicated to producing original, responsible investigative journalism on issues of public concern in the USA and around the world.

More about the Center

International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

The Center’s International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) is a collaboration of some of the world’s leading investigative reporters. ICIJ extends globally the Center’s style of watchdog journalism, working with 100 reporters in 50 countries to produce long-term, transnational projects.

ICIJ website