THE NEW SPEAKER ON HEALTH CARE — After weeks of turmoil, the House has a speaker — Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.) — allowing the chamber to resume legislating and attempting to fund the government. The consensus among health policy experts that Pulse consulted over the past several weeks has been that it mattered more for health policy that a speaker was in place than who that speaker was. Johnson will have to move quickly to fund the government by Nov. 17. The path forward: Johnson has proposed a floor vote on the Labor/HHS appropriations and the Agriculture-FDA appropriations bills the week of Nov. 13. The Labor/HHS bill has been among the most difficult to move in the chamber, with the GOP looking to add abortion-related and other controversial amendments. He also calls for a working group to “address Member concerns” with the FDA bill. Johnson acknowledged his schedule is “ambitious” and has proposed a stopgap spending bill that would run through Jan. 15 or April 15 to avoid a “Christmas omnibus.” He hopes to have by the end of November a “legislative blueprint through the end of the 118th Congress.” In health care, that could include moving on a sweeping transparency package and addressing expired programs, including the SUPPORT Act on the opioid epidemic, the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act and the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. Johnson’s history: Johnson has been more directly involved in health care than some other candidates who had attempted to become speaker. The former Republican Study Committee chair led a push in 2019 for the group’s health care plan to replace Obamacare. The plan would have rolled back Medicaid expansion and many regulations on the individual market. Democrats are raising concerns about Johnson’s push for Medicare and Medicaid cuts and his record on abortion. Johnson is a former senior counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom — the conservative legal powerhouse behind the case that overturned Roe v. Wade — now spearheading efforts to restrict abortion pills nationwide, POLITICO’s Alice Miranda Ollstein reports. In that role, he worked to shut down abortion clinics and defend anti-abortion laws in Louisiana. He’s also been out in front on a number of red-meat issues, including slamming gender-affirming care for children and the CDC for its guidance on school reopening amid the pandemic. On K Street: Not many Johnson alums are in the health care lobbying world, according to a POLITICO review of his former staffers. Ruth Ward, a former policy adviser to Johnson, is at the conservative Family Policy Alliance. WELCOME TO THURSDAY PULSE. The dust is still settling, but we want to know what’s next in health care policy with the House returning to having a speaker. We can keep you anonymous. Reach us at bleonard@politico.com or ccirruzzo@politico.com. Follow along @_BenLeonard_ and @ChelseaCirruzzo. TODAY ON OUR PULSE CHECK PODCAST, host Alice Miranda Ollstein talks with POLITICO health care reporter Erin Schumaker, who explains why Sen. Bernie Sanders couldn't rally Democrats to reject President Joe Biden's pick to lead the NIH in an attempt to hold more sway over the administration and force it to take further action on lowering drug prices.
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