Obamacare’s Architects Reap Windfall As Washington Lobbyists

capitolusa

The Hill
(Excerpt)

Major lobbying firms such as Fierce,  Isakowitz & Blalock, The Glover Park Group, Alston & Bird, BGR Group and  Akin Gump can all boast an Affordable Care Act insider on their lobbying roster  — putting them in a prime position to land coveted clients.

“When [Vice  President] Biden leaned over [during the signing of the healthcare law] and  said to [President] Obama, ‘This is a big f’n deal,’ ” said Ivan Adler, a  headhunter at the McCormick Group, “he was right.”

Veterans of the healthcare push are now lobbying for corporate giants such as  Delta Air Lines, UPS, BP America and Coca-Cola, and for healthcare companies  including GlaxoSmithKline, UnitedHealth Group and the Blue Cross Blue Shield  Association.

Ultimately, the clients are after one thing: expert help in dealing with the  most sweeping overhaul of the country’s healthcare system in decades.

“Healthcare lobbying on K Street is as strong as it ever was, and it’s due to  the fact that the Affordable Care Act seems to be ever-changing,” Adler said.  “What’s at stake is huge. … Whenever there’s a lot of money at stake, there’s  a lot of lobbying going on.”

The voracious need for lobbying help in dealing with ObamaCare has created a  price premium for lobbyists who had first-hand experience in crafting or  debating the law.

Experts say that those able to fetch the highest salaries have come from the  Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) or committees with oversight power  over healthcare.

Demand for ObamaCare insiders is even higher now that major pieces of the  law, including the healthcare exchanges and individual insurance mandate, are  being set up through a slew of complicated federal regulations.

“Congress is easy to watch,” said Tim LaPira, a politics professor at James  Madison University who researches the government affairs industry, “but agencies  are harder to watch because their actions are often opaque. This leads to a  greater demand on K Street” for people who understand the fine print, he  said.

“K Street’s agenda follows the government’s agenda. It’s not typically the  other way around,” he said.

Watchdogs say the rise of the ObamaCare lobbyist is another example of the  “revolving door” that turns public service into private enrichment.

“After passage of major legislation, those who have networks on Capitol Hill  take exceedingly lucrative jobs with the same industries subject to the  legislation,” said Craig Holman, a lobbyist for Public Citizen. “It raises  questions about the [bill’s] integrity.”

For K Street, healthcare lobbying has been a bright spot in what has  otherwise been a down business cycle.

While lobbying revenue at major firms has been flat or declining in recent  years, the healthcare law has generated steady work — a trend that is likely to  continue for years to come.

That’s because ObamaCare runs on a long timeline — well into the next  administration. Unless the law is severely crippled, the reform’s rules and  requirements will be rolling out through at least 2020.

That’s good news for lobbyists who want to sign up clients for the long  haul.

The windfall from the healthcare overhaul is being reaped at firms large and  small. Some veterans of the legislative push have landed at boutique firms that  are increasingly specializing in lobbying niches.

The firm Avenue Solutions, for instance, recently hired Yvette Fontenot, a  former staffer for both the Senate Finance Committee, which wrote ObamaCare’s  tax-related provisions, and HHS’s Office of Health Reform, which is assisting  the implementation.

Since her hire in April, the four-woman firm has picked up Health Care  Service Corp. as a client, and Fontenot is now lobbying for the Blue Cross Blue  Shield Association and the National Electrical Manufacturers Association as  well.

The Democratic firm banks about $3 million in revenue per year, records show,  but is on pace for growth in 2013, earning $1.8 million through the first half  of the year.

It’s not just ex-staffers who are becoming trusted ObamaCare guides — former  members of Congress are lobbying on the law as well.

Former Rep. Earl Pomeroy (D-N.D.) joined Alston & Bird in 2011 after  dealing with healthcare and tax issues as a member of the House Ways and Means  Committee.

Now Pomeroy and his one-time chief of staff, Bob Siggins, are lobbying on  ObamaCare for clients such as clients such as Vision Service Plan, the National  Coordinating Committee for Multiemployer Plans and Medicare — a health insurance  provider.

Consulting is another avenue former staffers and officials can take to work  for outside interests while they look to comply with and shape the impending  regulations.

“This is not a do-it-yourself project; it’s complicated,” said Adler. “They  need help from insiders to help navigate this thing correctly.”

Former senior counsel to HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius Dora Hughes became a  senior policy adviser at the law firm Sidley Austin last year.

Hughes is not a registered lobbyist, and told The Hill she mainly provides  “strategic policy advice” while abiding by the ethics pledge not to lobby the  administration. She has no congressional contacts in her sights, either.

Even the president needs some lobbying know-how when it comes to advancing  ObamaCare.

The White House brought on Clinton administration veteran and former lobbyist  Chris Jennings last month to help navigate the implementation of the law.

During a call with several directors of the state healthcare exchanges on  Wednesday, Jennings was seated in a plum position — right next to  Obama.

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