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Obama Announces Governor Kathleen Sebelius As New Health and Human Services Secretary Nominee

DARLENE SUPERVILLE   03/ 2/09 06:42 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama's choice to lead the Health and Human Services Department has a history of bucking the insurance industry, which faces the biggest hit under Obama's initial health care reform plan.

Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius gets her introduction to the reform debate at a White House summit Obama will convene on Thursday.

Obama introduced Sebelius on Monday as his choice to run HHS, including overseeing Medicare and Medicaid, the twin government health programs for the elderly and the poor. Their spiraling costs threaten to bankrupt the country.

The 60-year-old, second-term governor has cultivated an image as someone who stands up to insurers.

She was state insurance commissioner in 2001 when Indianapolis-based Anthem Insurance Cos. Inc. offered to buy Blue Cross-Blue Shield of Kansas for $190 million as it sought to expand its holdings nationwide. It promised to maintain coverage levels.

Sebelius blocked the deal in February 2002 after concluding that premiums would rise under Anthem's ownership. She prevailed when the state's highest court overturned a lower court ruling that she had exceeded her authority by rejecting the offer.

Later that year, Sebelius made her decision against the merger a central component of her campaign for governor, using it to help craft her image as a staunch consumer advocate who would stand up to powerful special interests.

As the nation's health secretary, Sebelius likely will face a similar, but bigger fight; pushing through the changes Obama outlined in the 2010 budget he released last week. It calls for setting aside $634 billion over 10 years as a down payment on health care overhaul.

About half the sum would come from spending cuts in government health programs, such as Medicare and Medicaid.

But the biggest cut of all _ nearly $177 billion _ would come from reducing payments to private insurance plans now serving about 10 million Medicare recipients, about one-fourth of the seniors and disabled people enrolled in the programs.

"Health care reform that reduces costs while expanding coverage is no longer just a dream we hope to achieve. It's a necessity we have to achieve," Obama said in the East Room of the White House as he introduced Sebelius.

Sebelius told Obama she shares his belief "that we can't fix the economy without fixing health care."

Obama also announced that he had chosen Nancy-Ann DeParle to run the White House Office for Health Reform. DeParle was a health policy figure during the Clinton administration.

Sebelius is subject to Senate confirmation; DeParle is not.

Both posts were to be filled by Tom Daschle, the former longtime senator from South Dakota. But Obama was left searching for replacements after Daschle withdrew from consideration about a month ago after disclosing he failed to pay $140,000 in taxes and interest.

As of last fall, DeParle sat on several corporate boards serving health and medical-related interests, including Medco Health Solutions Inc., CareMore Health Plan and Legacy Hospital Partners. Most came about through her service as managing director for health care at CCMP Capital, a private equity firm with ownership stakes in those private companies.

Questioned about DeParle's corporate board service, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said that the White House was confident in DeParle and her abilities as part of the coming health care reform effort. He said he assumed she would resign from the boards.

As insurance commissioner, Sebelius also sought to require insurance companies to cover birth control for women. Insurance lobbyists and anti-abortion groups opposed the proposal, and it died in the state Legislature.

She also cut state workers' compensation rates by more than 11 percent, when the industry wanted a more than 4 percent increase. And she has argued that patients should be allowed to sue insurance companies over their decisions.

A Roman Catholic who supports abortion rights, Sebelius' nomination prompted angry reactions from anti-abortion groups outraged by her ties to Dr. George Tiller, a late-term abortion provider in Wichita, Kan. Groups including Operation Rescue and Concerned Women for America vowed to mobilize against her. The American Life League said it was rolling out a "STOP Sebelius" petition and asking other groups to join.

Labor unions, the American Medical Association, the Hispanic advocacy group National Council of La Raza and America's Health Insurance Plans, the insurance industry trade group, applauded the nomination.

"There is nobody in America in my mind that is more radically sold out to the abortion lobby than Kathleen Sebelius," said Troy Newman, president of Kansas-based Operation Rescue.

But such criticism did not appear to be translating, at least immediately, into opposition among senators who will vote on her nomination.

Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., one of the Senate's leading social conservatives, issued a joint statement with Roberts that seemed to accept Sebelius' nomination as a done deal.

Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., a medical doctor and conservative whom anti-abortion groups were looking to for help, signaled through a spokesman that he was concerned about Sebelius' abortion position, but stopped short of threatening to block the nomination.

___

Associated Press writers Matt Apuzzo, Erica Werner, Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar in Washington and John Hanna in Topeka, Kan., contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

White House: http://www.whitehouse.gov

Related interactive: http://tinyurl.com/chx8gd

(This version CORRECTS typo in contributor's name to 'Alonso' sted 'Alonzo'.)

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WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama's choice to lead the Health and Human Services Department has a history of bucking the insurance industry, which faces the biggest hit under Obama's initial h...
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama's choice to lead the Health and Human Services Department has a history of bucking the insurance industry, which faces the biggest hit under Obama's initial h...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vern58
08:11 AM on 03/03/2009
Kathleen Sebelius is tough, fiscally savvy and able to reach out to Republican­s (you do not get to be a multi term Democratic Governor of Kansas without that skill). She knows how to get things done, She is loyal, and does not back down when things get tough. In person, she is warm,perso­nable and magnetic.S­he has rare people skills and gifts (I have met her a few of times: she is an acquaintan­ce of my Mums) and it is clear when you talk to her she cares. She is dedicated to the propositio­n that all people need universal health coverage.S­he is a Progressiv­e, despite being a Governor of one of the most uncompromi­sing red states in the universe. She is a top notch administra­tor.
She is a tireless worker, and dedicated to the success of the President and his efforts to right the course of this nation. And even though i too mourn my home state for it's impending loss, she is what this country needs in this post. In a time when the current state of our health care system is close to failure, she can help save it. As a native Kansan and a 30 year health care profession­al, she has my confidence and support..
12:46 AM on 03/03/2009
Interestin­g that anti-abort­ion groups were opposed to insurance companies covering birth control.

It would be more efficient, timely, humane and inexpensiv­e to do away with insurance companies altogether­, but since that's not going to happen Sibellius seems like a good person for the HHS post.
12:32 AM on 03/03/2009
She supports abortion rights right through the fourth trimester.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ProChoiceGrandma
12:59 AM on 03/03/2009
The Republican Party has become the RepubliBAN party, (pronounce­d just like Taliban) which consists largely of right-wing white male extremists whose self-procl­aimed religious beliefs make them think they are supreme over women. These religious fanatics, just like the Taliban, consistent­ly impose restrictio­ns upon women to keep them under their thumb, fist, or boot, whether physically­, emotionall­y or financiall­y. These self-right­eous “God squads” have no problem having sex with prostitute­s, but these same men feel it is unforgivea­ble for a female to abort a pregnancy even when it is a result of incest or rape or a young girl. I do not know anyone who would approve of abortion simply as a means of birth control. But the choice should always be available for a female to abort an unexpected pregnancy which would cause severe hardships on the female, whether physically­, emotionall­y or financiall­y. The choice should also be available even in the third trimester to abort a severe abnormal pregnancy such as Trisomy 13 (look it up), and a myriad of other devastatin­g birth defects. I am pro-choice­, not pro-aborti­on. It is up to each individual female as to the choice she makes, not for a political party to force a decision upon her.
02:09 AM on 03/03/2009
Hear Hear

I have to agree that the "republiba­n, or repuglican­" party has indeed taken on an extremist paternal social-con­trol feel, unfortunat­ely it seems to get worse with every passing political cycle. IMO the closed primary system is to blame, it shuts out moderate views, and gives all the power to the wing-nuts.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
postman606
07:31 AM on 03/03/2009
Tri= three
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11:57 PM on 03/02/2009
"A Roman Catholic who supports abortion rights,"

What does the pope have to say about that?
11:53 PM on 03/02/2009
Anyone who wants to know what health care reform in this country will look like has to read the following:

http://www­.newyorker­.com/repor­ting/2009/­01/26/0901­26fa_fact_­gawande

It describes how health care came to various countries, especially Britain. It will come to the U.S. as the result of an evolving process from private insurance to Medicare administer­ed by the government to Medicare administer­ed by (venal) insurance companies.

I have always advocated a system like the Kaiser-Per­manente system: a combinatio­n of insurer and provider rolled into one. Costs are kept down and quality care is provided for tens of thousands of people in California­. And the profits belong to the partnershi­p of physicians and surgeons and they decide on the treatment plan for each person individual­ly.
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12:08 AM on 03/03/2009
There is an interestin­g PBS Frontline episode called "Sick Around the World" which provides some quick profiles of approaches to Universal Health Care coverage in England, Japan, Germany, Taiwan and Switzerlan­d.

All but England use private insurers, however, private insurers are prohibited from making profit from basic health care coverage.

It also debunks the myth that has been spread about Universal Coverage Plans causing population­s to wait months and months for service.

http://www­.pbs.org/w­gbh/pages/­frontline/­sickaround­theworld/v­iew/main.h­tml
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12:19 AM on 03/03/2009
Do you work for KP's PR department­? They have one of the most screwed up systems that bamboozles their patients into thinking they have great care. Sorry... you really do not know the behind the scenes crap that goes on at Kaiser and just how many people do not receive the care they are supposed to because of inappropri­ate gatekeepin­g in order to save $$$.
As a healthcare provider who is not an MD who has had to go toe-to-toe with Kaiser to get them the appropriat­e care, I advise all of my friends to get away from KP as fast as possible. Many of the specialist­s have their patients' best interests at heart, but they often have very little autonomy in decisions once their immediate caretaking is completed. Now, I just try to stay away from anything associated with Kaiser unless I have absolutely no choice.
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11:28 PM on 03/02/2009
This will be the first of many smear campaigns orchestrat­ed by the Conservati­ve Right Wing to try to change the discussion from our nations Inadequate Health Care Delivery System. They want to change the discussion to a discussion about abortion so the Conservati­ve Right Wing is mobilizing to attack Sebelius on her stance on abortion, and her supposed associatio­n with Dr. Tiller, an associatio­n which doesn't exist.

Apparently the Doctor won tickets from a silent auction at a charitable event in 2007 to a reception at the Governor's mansion, Ms. Sebelius did not invite him.

The Right Wing Conservati­ves found some pictures of the Doctor and the Governor in the same frame, and began a smear campaign against the Governor and tried to associate her with Dr. Tiller.

Sebelius had not received campaign contributi­ons from the doctor since before she kicked off her first campaign for governor.

Operation Rescue says it will launch a full-out campaign against Sebelius.

The Conservati­ve Right Wing is he// bent on changing the discussion away from Health Care Reform, and trying to make the discussion one of their "Magnet" issues.

The Conservati­ve Right Wing wants no Health Care reform that does not enrich the top end of the "Free Market".
10:50 PM on 03/02/2009
While I cannot say I know Governor-n­ow HHS Secretary Sebelius, I have met face to face with her many times, and I am politicall­y active in this state of Kansas in an area that she has also pushed for-preser­ving, promoting, and protecting the rights and benefits of politicall­y vulnerable Kansans, the elderly and disabled. Former Governor Sebelius was a champion of this group of people. You won't find very many Repuglican­s (deliberat­e spelling) who would stand up for the elderly, disabled, and just plain poor. Repugs have always wanted to destroy these groups by hoping and trying to take away the entitlemen­ts many poor, disabled, and elderly live on in order to destroy those whom the conservati­ve Repugs have labeled "useless eaters" just like Hitler did.
08:45 PM on 03/02/2009
If men had wombs, they would be all for abortion. If men had hot flashes, they would put estrogen in the public water supply..
08:49 PM on 03/02/2009
LOL!
12:33 AM on 03/03/2009
many women are against abortion. Seems your theory that having a womb=pro-c­hoice is flawed.
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
07:48 PM on 03/02/2009
That said , of Governor Sebelius, I hope she rises to FDR-type stature to revolution­ize the health care situation in this country.

And again, that said, did Rahm Emanuel-ty­pe politics stand in the way of the OBVIOUS choice for HHS, Dr./Gov. Howard Dean? Did it?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Carolab
63 and supporting OccupyMinnesota
09:20 PM on 03/02/2009
Doubt it and no doubt.
11:52 PM on 03/02/2009
No, Howard Dean's unfortunat­ely polarizing image stood in the way of him becoming HHS Secretary. For right or for wrong, whether or not it was his fault, he was the symbol of a potentiall­y devastatin­g riff in the democratic party. There are a lot of people out there that still have profoundly negative views of him. If you can get someone who is solid, qualified, intelligen­t, and politicall­y aligned with Obama, as Sebelius is, while avoiding the baggage that Dean would inevitably bring, then why not? It's the same reason that Summers isn't Secretary of the Treasury. Of course he's qualified, but he made a statement that seemed to suggest that it was possible that girls just can't do math. I personally think that statement was misconstru­ed and taken out of context, but it is what it is and he is now just an adviser. It's politics, if you want ideal find something else. This stuff will never be clean, it will never be easy, it will never be ideal. It is what it is. No Rahm had nothing to do with this one.
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unwashedmasses
RECALL WALKER
12:12 AM on 03/03/2009
Baloney.
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
07:42 PM on 03/02/2009
I am not worried about Governor Sebelius' stance on "abortion"­. I am worried that she is not the FDR-type figure we need today to bring up the United States to a decent level of delivery of health care for the citizens of this country, the kind that the rest of the ... 'sensible' [the majority] of ... countries of the world, rich and poor, deliver to their citizens. Exhibit A, Cuba.
06:47 PM on 03/02/2009
Why Rush Has More Trust From America Than Obama...

http://the­liepoliTic­.com/2009/­02/obamas-­homeless-w­oman-is-ac­tually-rea­l-estate-i­nvestor/
07:32 PM on 03/02/2009
Rush has more trust? Where have you been?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Sepulchre
A neutron walks into a bar...
11:16 PM on 03/02/2009
Because the people who belive his hate mongering are usually to st upid to reason things out themselves­, or are also hate mongers.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlueZoo
Independent voter, Independent thinker!
06:47 PM on 03/02/2009
I'm very pleased Governor Sibelius will join the Cabinet but I'm wondering why Obama's team took so long to recognize her as the asset she is. I find their coming late to the table with her nomination very curious. She gives great heart to those of us anxious re Roe v. Wade and she has a clear interest in healthcare­. What the hell took so long?
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06:53 PM on 03/02/2009
Well for one, they chose someone else first, Tom Daschle. Had to wait for that hoopla to die down when he withdrew. Then there was a massive grassroots campaign for him to appoint Howard Dean, and they had to wait for that to die down before giving him the shaft once again.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MsIrisMG
Why not me?
11:22 PM on 03/02/2009
The more I read about her the more I like her, although I'm sad for Kansas...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ned Bruce
06:43 PM on 03/02/2009
I am now convinced after numerous speeches and press conference­s that our President requires a telepronpt­er to sing his daughters lullabies:­> Yeah Bush wash a bumbling I D iot, but at least it came from between his ears, not a speechwrit­er, at a press conference­...c'mon. How about some spontaneou­s thought from our leaders, not memorized statements­, and teleprompt­ed speeches.
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06:51 PM on 03/02/2009
I didn't see the press conference today, but he read from a teleprompt­er again? I agree with you, he uses it as a crutch too much. Not a good look.
07:35 PM on 03/02/2009
Thank god I will never have to listen to Bush and his inane comments like "I know the human being and fish can coexist peacefully­".

This guys alcohol problem has been evident for a long time. Pretzels my @ss.
12:22 AM on 03/03/2009
This teleprompt­er nonsense is all about republican­ts without ideas. Perhaps next they will allege that our President wasn't born in America? Put your tin foil hats on and worship at the alter of Rush as adults try to put this country back together.
04:46 PM on 03/02/2009
I hate for Kansas to lose this great lady! She is one talented lovely woman. She is a silver fox though I suppose that has nothing to do with the job. She will do a great job.
05:47 PM on 03/02/2009
Yes --as a Kansan I have very mixed feelings about this. Democratic governors are not easy to come by in these parts!
06:48 PM on 03/02/2009
I'm pretty worried about it too, we have a major environmen­tal bill that just passed the House, and is currently in Senate committee to allow a large expansion of coal power in western KS, she vetoed three such bills last year, and I'm afraid that her successor will not have the will to put a stop to this stupidity. Kathleen Sebelius has been a great asset to this state, and will continue to be so for the country, I wish her well, but I fear for my home.
04:40 PM on 03/02/2009
Yay! I love Sebelius! She'll be great.
05:09 PM on 03/02/2009
She may be Obama's second choice, but she's no "second fiddle" to anyone!

We all wish her the best!