Two additional candidates have emerged as possible nominees to be secretary of health and human services, reports The Washington Post. According to Democratic sources in and around the White House, those candidates are Lloyd Dean and Jack Lew.
Dean is chief executive of San Francisco-based Catholic Healthcare West and was recently named one of the top 25 minority health care executives by Modern Healthcare Magazine. Lew was involved in health care reform during the Clinton Administration and worked in the White House Office of Management and Budget, according to The Post. One small snag, reports The Post, is that Lew was recently confirmed as deputy secretary of state.
Yesterday we reported that Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius was at the top of Obama's list to replace former Senator Tom Daschle as the nominee for U.S. Secretary of Health & Human Services. Sebelius removed herself from consideration for a cabinet position last December, citing the need to reform Kansas' budget. However, The Wall Street Journal reports that Gov. Sebelius told Ron Pollack, president of Families USA, that she would accept the nomination for secretary of health and human services.
Showing posts with label President Obama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label President Obama. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Sebelius, Podesta on Obama's Short List to Replace Daschle
We are pleased to announce that we have moved to a new website, HealthReformWatch.com. The article below, and a host of other new links and resources, may be found there and here.
A top official in the Obama administration says that Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius is at the top of the list to replace former Senator Tom Daschle as President Obama’s nominee for Secretary of Health & Human Services, according to the AP/Kansas City Star. This comes after Daschle withdrew his nomination last week, leaving many wondering about the future of U.S. health care reform.
Sebelius has been praised by advocacy groups for the “watchdog role” that she played for eight years as insurance commissioner before she became governor. The Kansas Governor was an early supporter of Obama’s campaign for the presidency. After Obama won the election in November, she was in consideration for several cabinet posts. In early December though, she announced that she had removed herself from consideration for a Washington job, citing Kansas' budget problems that needed her attention.
Also on Obama’s short list is former White House chief of staff under President Clinton, John Podesta, and Tennessee Governor Phil Bredeson. Some advocacy groups are reportedly lining up to oppose the nomination of the Democratic governor from Tennessee. Bredeson remains under consideration but was not as likely as Sebelius to make the final cut, the senior official said.
As governor, Bredesen reduced the state's Medicaid beneficiaries by 170,000 adults in 2005 as a result of budget constraints, and reduced benefits for thousands more TennCare beneficiaries, according to the AP/Austin American-Statesman. In 1980, Bredesen founded a health maintenance organization called HealthAmerica Corp., which became the country's second-largest HMO before he sold it in 1986 for about $400 million.
Critics of Bredesen, who say he has administered the largest public health insurance cuts in U.S. history, say that the cuts illustrate why he is "the wrong person to lead an effort to expand health insurance coverage."
Others argue that Bredesen had to make difficult decisions that ultimately led to the preservation of Tennessee's struggling health care system, thereby averting disaster.
A top official in the Obama administration says that Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius is at the top of the list to replace former Senator Tom Daschle as President Obama’s nominee for Secretary of Health & Human Services, according to the AP/Kansas City Star. This comes after Daschle withdrew his nomination last week, leaving many wondering about the future of U.S. health care reform.
Sebelius has been praised by advocacy groups for the “watchdog role” that she played for eight years as insurance commissioner before she became governor. The Kansas Governor was an early supporter of Obama’s campaign for the presidency. After Obama won the election in November, she was in consideration for several cabinet posts. In early December though, she announced that she had removed herself from consideration for a Washington job, citing Kansas' budget problems that needed her attention.
Also on Obama’s short list is former White House chief of staff under President Clinton, John Podesta, and Tennessee Governor Phil Bredeson. Some advocacy groups are reportedly lining up to oppose the nomination of the Democratic governor from Tennessee. Bredeson remains under consideration but was not as likely as Sebelius to make the final cut, the senior official said.
As governor, Bredesen reduced the state's Medicaid beneficiaries by 170,000 adults in 2005 as a result of budget constraints, and reduced benefits for thousands more TennCare beneficiaries, according to the AP/Austin American-Statesman. In 1980, Bredesen founded a health maintenance organization called HealthAmerica Corp., which became the country's second-largest HMO before he sold it in 1986 for about $400 million.
Critics of Bredesen, who say he has administered the largest public health insurance cuts in U.S. history, say that the cuts illustrate why he is "the wrong person to lead an effort to expand health insurance coverage."
Others argue that Bredesen had to make difficult decisions that ultimately led to the preservation of Tennessee's struggling health care system, thereby averting disaster.
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