july 12, 2001: President Bush lays out plans for Medicare prescription drug benefit. |
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june 20, 2003: Medicare actuary Richard Foster is warned not to disclose to Congress his estimate of the proposal’s true cost. “The consequences for insubordination are extremely severe,” Foster is told. |
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june 27, 2003: Senate and House approve different versions of the drug bill. Rep. Billy Tauzin, R-La., one of the legislation’s principal authors, describes it as “a shot of legislative botox [that] will rejuvenate an antiquated program by eliminating the age-old lines of a different era.” |
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july 15, 2003: Conference committee of 5 Democrats and 12 Republicans begins work to reconcile the two versions of the bill. |
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nov 13, 2003: President Bush calls on Congress to “finish the job.” |
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nov 17, 2003: aarp endorses bill, launches $7 million ad campaign. |
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nov 21, 2003: Bush calls wavering Republicans from Air Force One. |
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nov 22, 2003: |
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dec 16, 2003: Thomas Scully resigns as administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, joins Alston & Bird, where he will lobby for drug companies. |
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march 5, 2004: Patrick Morrisey, who as chief health counsel of the House energy and commerce committee was a principal staff author of the bill, takes job as lobbyist for drugmakers. In all, 15 members of Congress, staffers, and officials who worked on the drug bill will go to work for industry. |
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sept 30, 2004: Following an investigation of Rep. Smith’s bribery allegations, House ethics committee admonishes three representatives, including Majority Leader Tom DeLay and Rep. Smith himself, for “making public statements that risked impugning the reputation of the House.” |
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dec 15, 2004: Rep. Tauzin named president of drug lobby group PhRMA; annual pay reported at $2 million. |
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