Blunt, health foundation spar over uninsured
Gov. Matt Blunt took issue with the Missouri Foundation of Health today, not long after the foundation announced its new Web site dedicated to informing Missourians about the plight of the uninsured. The undercurrent of the dispute, of course, continues to be Blunt’s criticism of Democrat Attorney General Jay Nixon, the presumptive Democratic nominee for governor in 2008, a seat Blunt is no longer seeking.
First, the news: The health foundation, a private not-for-profit group created by a legal dispute between the state and Blue Cross and Blue Shield, is setting up a new Web site, www.covermissouri.org, to research and propose policy directives related to decreasing the number of uninsured in Missouri.
Blunt, however, took the opportunity to issue a news release today accusing the foundation of being controlled by Nixon. Indeed, Nixon does appoint advisory board members which ultimately have a say in the make-up of the foundation’s board. And the foundation has given grants to organizations that are generally in tune with Nixon’s gubernatorial campaign.
But most interesting about Blunt’s news release today was his allegation that the foundation has “declined” to partner with the state.
That’s partially true, says foundation President and CEO Dr. James Kimmey.
Back in December, when he was still running for governor, Blunt asked Kimmey’s organization for what Kimmey termed about “80 percent of our funding for the next 10 years.” Kimmey says the board met and refused Blunt’s request.
In a letter to the governor, Kimmey pointed out that the foundation regularly funds state programs.
“It was an unusual request,” Kimmey said today. “I dare say unprecedented. … A lot of this, I think, has to do with the gubernatorial campaign.”
See the letters between Blunt and the Foundation here.


(3 votes, average: 4.33 out of 5)
The “Missouri Foundation for Health” is a scam, plain and simple. They took the proceeds of a settlement which was supposed to be in the public interest, and placed them into an organization which is controlled by a partisan official who happens to be running for governor. As one could have easily predicted, not a few of those dollars - and, by the way, this goes way beyond the one organization mentioned in the above link - have found their way to liberal activist groups.
The right thing to do here would have simply been to give the money to the Department of Health and Senior Services. There was no reason, other than to give Nixon control of this money, to set up this organization. A shadowy organization skimming public money for partisan purposes … yet another way our attorney general reminds me of another politician with whom he shares a surname.