ABOUT TOM PRICE
Age: 60
Born: Lansing, Mich.
Home: Roswell, Ga.
Education: Bachelor's and M.D., University of Michigan. Medical residency, Emory University.
Career: Private practice as an orthopedic surgeon, followed by a period as an assistant professor at Emory and as medical director of the orthopedic clinic at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Served four terms in the Georgia Senate, then was elected in 2004 to the U.S. House of Representatives, where he will begin his sixth term in January. He has served as chairman of the House Republican Study Committee and the House Republican Policy Committee, and will become chairman of the House Budget Committee next month.
Family: Wife, Betty; one son.
Rep. Tom Price, a Georgia surgeon representing the district Newt Gingrich once did, said the so-called premium support plan for Medicare, which would provide voucher-like subsidies for seniors to buy health insurance instead of the fixed benefits offered by the current system, is “settled policy” among Republicans controlling the House.
Price told reporters Friday that top Republicans haven’t decided whether to use a special filibuster-proof budget bill to repeal so-called Obamacare or cut spending elsewhere in the budget.
Price succeeds Ryan, R-Wis., who became a national political figure as the 2012 GOP vice presidential nominee. He also has a more difficult challenge than Ryan, who passed his nonbinding budget plan for four straight years in largely the same form but never followed up with the more challenging task of trying to implement the plan with binding legislation.
The task is more difficult this year because reaching a budget compromise with the new GOP-controlled Senate is thornier than simply reaching consensus among House Republicans.
The arcane congressional budget process involves passing a nonbinding budget resolution, which sets the broad parameters for follow up bills setting agency operating budgets and curbing spending on autopilot benefit programs such as welfare, Medicaid and student loan subsidies. The budget resolution and follow-up measures known as reconciliation bills are the only legislative vehicles that can’t be filibustered by the minority party in the Senate. Only one such measure can be used each year to cut spending.
Price acknowledged the temptation to use the filibuster-proof process to deliver a measure largely repealing the Affordable Care Act to President Barack Obama’s desk or to use the “finite number of arrows” to go after spending elsewhere in the budget.
Price said he wants the GOP budget to lead to “the greatest amount of opportunity to the greatest number of Americans.”
He also said he wants to overhaul the budget process to allow congressional scorekeepers to take into account the economic feedback that policy changes have on the economy. Under such “dynamic scoring,” tax cuts or a reform of the complex tax code would cost less because they spur economic growth and generate greater revenues.
Price did not say whether he favors retaining Doug Elmendorf as director of the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. Elmendorf was appointed by Democrats and his term expires in January.
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