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The 1st congressional District of Hawaii is about as far from Washington, D.C.鈥檚 pitched political battles as you can get 鈥 not typically seen as a national bellwether. Yet the race for the congressional district, centered on southern Oahu, is one of several competitive elections that has attracted the attention of big-money lobbyists seeking to influence the direction of American health care policy.

Hawaii鈥檚 1st District seat, which was vacated by incumbent Democratic Rep. Colleen Hanabusa, who is running for governor, has attracted six serious candidates to the Democratic primary in this reliably blue district. According to documents obtained by The Intercept, at least three of the candidates took time out from their schedules to talk to a consultant dispatched by the Healthcare Leadership Council, a lobbying group that seeks to advance the goals of the largest players in the private health care industry.

Now, the 1st District candidates working with the Healthcare Leadership Council 鈥 state Sen. Donna Mercado Kim, Hawaii Lt. Gov. Doug Chin, and Honolulu City Council Member Ernest Martin 鈥 are taking heat from their opponents for talking to an industry-friendly group, even as public opinion is increasingly rallying to positions opposed by giant health care companies.

鈥淒emocrats running in a primary election will say they support 鈥楳edicare for All,鈥 but what do they say to lobbyists behind the scenes?鈥 said Kaniela Ing, a state lawmaker vying for the 1st District seat on a democratic socialist platform, warning of Democrats who make progressive promises when campaigning, but then work hand in hand with industries when in office. 鈥淲e need health care champions, not puppets.鈥

One of the leading candidates has campaigned on a promise to crack down on over-priced pharmaceuticals and promote single payer health care, but told the consultant dispatched by the Healthcare Leadership Council that he would maintain drug industry-friendly pricing policies and views Medicare for All with skepticism.

The Healthcare Leadership Council has closely tracked what its lobbyists have described as the 鈥渓eftward movement鈥 within the Democratic Party. In Hawaii and other states, the lobby group wanted to know if ideas popularized by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. 鈥 such as aggressive proposals to reduce the cost of pharmaceuticals and institute a single-payer health care system modeled on Medicare 鈥 were taking hold.

The council, which on industry advocacy and brings together chief executives of major health corporations, represents an array of health industries, including insurers, hospitals, drugmakers, medical device manufacturers, pharmacies, health product distributors, and information technology companies.

The group鈥檚 focus on competitive open seats around the country 鈥 like Hawaii鈥檚 1st Congressional District 鈥 is aimed at shaping the next generation of lawmakers鈥 views on health care policy.

The Healthcare Leadership Council鈥檚 outreach in Hawaii began in January. In an email obtained by The Intercept, the group told candidates that it was in the process of forming a coalition to 鈥渏ointly develop policies, plans, and programs to achieve their vision of a 21st century system that makes affordable, high-quality care accessible to all Americans鈥 鈥 language that obscured its national campaign to monitor and blunt the energy behind progressive health policy reforms. The email included an invitation for the candidates to take a meeting in Honolulu.

Kim, Chin, and Martin agreed to speak to the Healthcare Leadership Council, which then drew up dossiers on each candidate based on their answers to the survey questions. The dossiers, which were obtained by The Intercept and Documented, profiled each of the candidates, including their photos, biographical sketches, contact information for their campaigns, and a checklist for determining their positions on certain issues of importance to the Healthcare Leadership Council. (Kim and Martin鈥檚 campaigns did not respond to a request for comment for this story.)

In an email to The Intercept, Michael Freeman, executive vice president of the Healthcare Leadership Council, said that his organization surveys 鈥渃ongressional candidates every election cycle regarding their views on a wide range of healthcare issues.鈥

The dossiers offer the candidates鈥 general outlook on health care policy issues, as well as their answers on specific policy positions. Of Kim, the former state senator, the group鈥檚 profile says, 鈥淪he is very pro-market, opposes any attempt at single payer, does not support price controls on pharmaceuticals and agrees that Medicaid and Medicare need to be managed by the private market.鈥

 

Click here to view the  Courtesy of Intercept/Documented

Chin is a 鈥渕oderate Democrat that has represented healthcare providers in Med-mal lawsuits,鈥 said . Chin, the survey noted, 鈥渟upports the market concept advocated by HLC and does not think a single payer/Medicare-for-All approach would work in Hawaii.鈥

鈥淢artin supports a majority of HLC鈥檚 positions,鈥 the profile on the Honolulu City Council member says. 鈥淗e does not want single payer.鈥 But, , Martin needed better education on health policy.

In some cases, what the candidates told the lobbyist appeared to differ from what they told voters.

Chin indicated to the Healthcare Leadership Council that he supports its position that the 鈥渂est way to achieve the lowest prices for Medicare beneficiaries in the Medicare Part D program is through the current process of private sector negotiation,鈥 according to his dossier.

As it stands now, the Medicare law, , prevents the agency from using its collective bargaining power to negotiate lower prices for pharmaceuticals as part a benefit program known as Part D. Progressive health care activists have agitated for the government to become directly involved in negotiations. Public Citizen, a watchdog group, claims that allowing Medicare to negotiate for lower-priced drugs from the program鈥檚 budget.

Drug industry groups like the Healthcare Leadership Council 鈥 which is funded by pharma giants Amgen, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Pfizer, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, and Bristol-Myers Squibb 鈥 have opposed the negotiation route.

Chin鈥檚 claim, according to the Healthcare Leadership Council documents, that he supports the industry-friendly status quo contrasts sharply with what he has said in public. In July, he told local news website Civil Beat that he supports 鈥渟teps like empowering the federal government to negotiate lower prescription drug prices for Medicare beneficiaries.鈥

In response to a request for comment from The Intercept, Chin stuck with his public position that Medicare Part D should include negotiations with drugmakers over prices. 鈥淒oug Chin speaks with seniors across Hawai鈥檌 who are making heartbreaking sacrifices to buy the life-saving prescriptions and get the quality health care they need. That鈥檚 why he supports the merits of a single-payer system, and it鈥檚 why he will demand that Medicare use its existing authorities 鈥 and support giving it new powers 鈥 to negotiate better deals for seniors,鈥 said Chin鈥檚 campaign manager, Dylan Beesley. 鈥淒oug was endorsed by End Citizens United because he is committed to getting the secret cash from big drug companies out of politics 鈥 for good.鈥

The campaign鈥檚 statement did not address a question from The Intercept about why the council lists Chin as supporting its position that Medicare should not negotiate directly with drug companies 鈥 or the discrepancy with his public stance.

Click here to read the . Courtesy The Intercept/Documented

The dossiers indicated that all three candidates who met with the group were rated as positive leaders who shared much of the Healthcare Leadership Council agenda and were the type of politicians who might turn to the group to help formulate policy.

Yet the Healthcare Leadership Council didn鈥檛 blanket all the state鈥檚 congressional candidates with requests for meetings. Beth Fukumoto, a Republican-turned-Democratic state legislator who launched her campaign for the 1st Congressional District seat in March, had not heard from the group, according to a campaign spokesperson. Another candidate for the seat, former Rep. Ed Case, a conservative 鈥淏lue Dog鈥 Democrat who has served recently as a senior executive at Outrigger Hotels, did not respond to a request for comment from The Intercept about whether he had received any requests from the Healthcare Leadership Council.

The group also kept tabs on candidates that could be a threat to its agenda. In its internal profile for Ing, the democratic socialist candidate, the Healthcare Leadership Council noted that Ing vocally supports a single-payer, public health care system. 鈥淥ne of Kaniela Ing鈥檚 top priorities will be to promote a single-payer, Medicare-for-all system,鈥 the dossier says.

Lobbyists for the group have told health industry executives to remain vigilant about the threat of single payer.

鈥淚t would be a mistake for us to overlook the growing number of lawmakers who are supportive of measures to expand significantly government鈥檚 role in healthcare,鈥 published at the end of last year.

The report observed that Sanders, the Vermont senator, had introduced a 鈥淢edicare for All鈥 bill during every congressional session, typically by himself. But when he in 2017, Sanders 鈥渉ad 14 Democratic senators with him, including some thought to be presidential contenders in 2020.鈥 Even more moderate members, including Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., and Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Col., had introduced a public option bill that would provide patients with the ability to purchase a government-sponsored insurance plan that would ensure access with Medicare providers, paying Medicare reimbursement rates.

The Healthcare Leadership Council report said that while these ideas do not have the political support to pass at the moment, the 鈥渕omentum on the Democratic side of the aisle is undeniable.鈥 The group has warned health care executives to remain vigilant and dispatched its team of lobbyists, which of two former members of Congress and several former senior congressional staffers, to keep tabs on rising candidates.

Click here to see the  Courtesy of Intercept/Documented

 

The Healthcare Leadership Council鈥檚 outreach to candidates was not limited to Hawaii. Lobbyists working with the group have surveyed congressional candidates for open seats in Indiana, Kansas, California, Minnesota, Illinois, and New Mexico.

For instance, Young Kim, the Republican nominee for California鈥檚 39th Congressional District, an open seat and one of the most competitive races in the country, spoke to the Healthcare Leadership Council earlier this year.

鈥淪he has very little understanding of the healthcare delivery system, but wants to learn,鈥 . 鈥淗er philosophy is similar to HLC鈥檚 overall agenda. She supports the market as the real innovator in healthcare does not support California鈥檚 effort to implement a Medicare for All system.鈥 The lobbyists who drew up the dossier found that Kim agreed with the Healthcare Leadership Council on 88 percent of the policy positions it inquired about.

noted that some Republican candidates were privately skeptical of repealing the Affordable Care Act. Jim Hagedorn, a Republican candidate for Congress in Minnesota, shared internal polling from his campaign with the Healthcare Leadership Council, revealing that health care is the No. 1 issue in his district. Though he expressed support for 鈥渇ree market healthcare,鈥 Hagedorn conceded that he has heard from 鈥渕any farmers having to choose to not to carry insurance and gamble that they do not need it.鈥

The Healthcare Leadership Council鈥檚 candidate outreach program is part of the group鈥檚 ongoing push to develop 鈥済et-out-the-vote鈥 efforts for favored politicians, develop 鈥渆arly connections to successful congressional candidates,鈥 and aggregate data about up-and-coming lawmakers so that health care executives and lobbyists can quickly facilitate meetings and relationships, according to an internal document explaining its political approach to member companies. that it has conducted 3,900 meetings with lawmakers, staff, and candidates around health care issues.

The group also organizes coalition efforts with patient organizations, industry letters to regulators, and regular coffee sessions between legislators, congressional staff, and health industry executives.

The threat of government expansion into health care, however, has added new urgency to the council鈥檚 outreach efforts.

The Healthcare Leadership Council also recently produced a set of talking points to warn of the 鈥渞amifications of single-payer healthcare.鈥 The document makes the outlandish claim that 鈥淢edicare for All鈥 proposals might resemble the failed health care system of Venezuela and prophesies extreme cuts in care and health services.

In reality, the 鈥淢edicare for All鈥 program proposed by an increasing number of Democrats would be akin to the system in Canada, under which the government provides health insurance coverage free of cost for patients to seek care with private-sector providers. have found that the system in Canada and similar government-run health plans provide higher quality medical services at a much lower cost than the U.S. system.

The alarmist positions relayed in the talking points reprise a familiar role for the group.

Health insurance whistleblower Wendell Potter previously worked closely with the Healthcare Leadership Council. Potter later leaked documents detailing a health insurance industry plan to stigmatize single payer during the 2008 election, hoping that scare tactics would dissuade successful Democrats from championing the idea. The anti-single-payer plan at organizations such as the Progressive Policy Institute 鈥 the think tank arm of centrist group Third Way 鈥 to position the idea as an extremist threat to the Democratic Party. The plan called for supporting groups that would

The Healthcare Leadership Council also served as a coordinating organization for health industry lobbyists to launch attacks against President Bill Clinton鈥檚 push for a national health care plan in 1993. During the debate over the bill, industry organizations sponsored misleading campaign commercials to mobilize mass opposition to the policy.

At a gathering of health care executives in 1994, at the height of negotiations, then-Council President Michael David Bromberg and confronted then-first lady Hillary Clinton, threatening that if she did not agree to industry demands, the industry would strike back and campaign against her and her husband鈥檚 plan.

The Intercept鈥檚 publisher, First Look Media, was founded by Pierre Omidyar, who is also the founder and publisher of Civil Beat.

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