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MIT economist Jonathan Gruber apologizes for ‘insulting’ remarks on health care

MIT economist Jonathan Gruber testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., Tuesday before the House Oversight Committee health care hearing. (Associated Press)
Charles Babington Associated Press

WASHINGTON – MIT economist Jonathan Gruber – an often-quoted adviser on the president’s health care law – told Congress on Tuesday he was glib and “inexcusably arrogant” when he said it was “the stupidity of the American voter” that led to the law’s passage. Democrats tried to limit the damage as Republicans raked Gruber at a four-hour hearing, but acknowledged he gave the GOP a political gift “wrapped in a bow.”

Gruber told groups in 2012 and 2013 that voter stupidity and a “lack of transparency” were important to passing the hard-fought legislation. Appearing before the House Oversight committee Tuesday, Gruber expanded on earlier apologies, repeatedly saying “I was conjecturing in areas beyond my expertise.”

Enduring one fierce lecture after another, Gruber said his earlier comments were uninformed, “glib, thoughtless and sometimes downright insulting.” He said he was showing off before various groups, and “trying to be something, I’m not, which was a political expert.”

He said the law’s passage was actually transparent and heavily debated in public, despite his earlier comments. And Gruber said he was not the “architect” of the law, as some press accounts had claimed.

But Republican Committee Chairman Darrell Issa of California called Gruber a crucial player in the legislation. Issa grilled Gruber repeatedly in what might be his last committee probe of what he calls “Obamacare.” Republican term limits will force Issa to surrender the committee chairmanship in the next Congress.

Issa and other Republicans sarcastically praised Gruber for “telling the truth” in his 2012 and 2013 remarks, while also hammering his efforts Tuesday to walk them back.

Gruber remained calm, but sometimes struggled to characterize the earlier remarks. They “were not lies,” he said. Rather, “they were my conjecture outside my area of expertise.”

Gruber defended his consulting work, which centers on economic models that predict health care costs.

Democrats tried to make the most of having an often-vilified witness retracting some of his most damaging remarks. Rep. Elijah Cummings of Maryland, the committee’s top Democrat, glared at Gruber and called his remarks from 2012 and 2013 “absolutely stupid” and “incredibly disrespectful.”

Also testifying Tuesday was Marilyn Tavenner, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Tavenner apologized for earlier having given the committee data that overstated enrollment under the health care law.