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White House To Put Full Court Press On Health Care
According to the New York Times, the White House is implementing a big health care push, and wil be pulling out all the stops to get its reform agenda passed... Taking Health Care Courtship Up Another Notch
After months of cutting deals and stroking drug makers, hospitals and doctors, the president’s aides are laying the groundwork for a final round of Congressional arm-twisting, with Mr. Obama increasingly in a hands-on role.
As the Finance Committee wrestles with the bill, which could form the backbone of an eventual Obama plan, the lobbying effort is already bearing fruit. One Democrat who consults frequently with the White House said that a main goal of the administration has been to prevent any Democrat from publicly declaring opposition to the measure. So far, the only one who has, Senator John D. Rockefeller IV of West Virginia, has scaled back his criticism after a private Oval Office session with the president.
Rahm Emanuel, the chief of staff, runs the campaign out of his West Wing office. A former congressman, he knows how to count votes. (It was Mr. Emanuel, for instance, who suggested Mr. Orszag reach out to Ms. Collins.) Aides say he does not host a regular health care meeting, but rather summons his team several times a day, typically with e-mail messages ordering colleagues to drop everything and show up right that minute.
Mr. Emanuel oversees two working groups: a policy group, run by Nancy-Ann DeParle, the head of the White House Office of Health Reform, and a political group, run by Jim Messina, the deputy chief of staff. They are deeply engaged in what Chris Jennings, who advised President Bill Clinton on health policy, calls “intelligence seeking” — trying to learn who has problems with the legislation, what those problems are and what it will take to win each member’s vote.
“We are at the concern-addressing stage,” said Dan Pfeiffer, Mr. Obama’s deputy communications director, adding, “This is a political and policy challenge of epic proportions, and it takes a lot of effort and attention to achieve it.”
Everyone who has relationships on Capitol Hill is expected to pitch in. Mr. Messina, a former chief of staff to Senator Max Baucus of Montana, the Finance Committee chairman, is the link to the finance panel. Phil Schiliro, the head of legislative affairs, spent years working for Representative Henry A. Waxman, the California Democrat who is an architect of the House bill. Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., who served for 36 years in the Senate, has been making calls to former colleagues, especially those on the Finance Committee.
Kathleen Sebelius, the secretary of health and human services, Tom Vilsack, the agriculture secretary, and Gary Locke, the commerce secretary, have also been working the phones. Their notes are passed on to Mr. Schiliro’s shop, which catalogs them for future use. The cabinet secretaries have also been doing interviews with select regional news outlets to shore up wavering Democrats in districts where Republicans are attacking Mr. Obama’s plans.
And the president has been holding more private meetings, aides say, with Democrats like Senator Maria Cantwell of Washington, who said she received an invitation to the Oval Office on a recent Friday, when she had hoped to spend the morning at home. She said she told the president the legislation would have to do more to rein in Medicare spending. “He was, like, ‘I’m all for this,’ ” Ms. Cantwell said.
“He is leaving no stone unturned,” said Senator Mary L. Landrieu, the Louisiana Democrat and Finance Committee member, who received an unsolicited call from Ms. Sebelius last week. She said they spent 20 minutes going over what she perceived as flaws in the bill.
The White House is carefully monitoring what senators say. When Senator Joseph I. Lieberman, the Connecticut independent, said on a Sunday morning talk show that health legislation should be delayed until the economy improves, his chief of staff got a telephone call from a worried-sounding Louisa Terrell, the White House legislative liaison assigned to monitor his office.
“She said, ‘Does he want to speak to Sebelius, does he want Peter Orszag?’ ” the senator said. He said it was not necessary. But last Friday, while Mr. Lieberman was at home preparing for Rosh Hashana, Mr. Locke, the commerce secretary, called. “He wanted to lobby me on health care,” Mr. Lieberman said.
At least one White House official, Ms. DeParle, has gone so far as to make a house call. When Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, expressed misgivings about how expanding Medicaid would affect California’s budget, Ms. DeParle gathered some charts and dropped in on a Saturday. They spent nearly three hours talking over coffee in Ms. Feinstein’s den.
White House Planning Full Court Press On Health Care


Comments
New York Times is reduced to being Obama's Pravda
What a pathetic joke of a newspaper the New York Times has become.
NYT is nothing more than a DNC house organ at this point, erasing all the convenient memory lapses along the way that would undermine the narrative that Rahm feeds them.
Taking it "up a notch"?? What did they do, turn it up to '11'? The prime time speech to Congress and nation was 'low key'? They are "PLANNING" a full court press?!? You mean, the Times is so out of the loop they havent noticed the 'full court press' has been in effect for MONTHS?!? Dont these dweebs know this is NOT NEWS!?!
The point of this NON-NEWS is that the liberal media, parrotting White House talking points, is ramping up the 'we are really serious now' narrative to give the lead balloon some momentum... and pressure the weak-kneed Dems in Congress "hey, Rahm will call you".
In fact, the nation does NOT WANT OBAMACARE ... majority DISAPPROVE of it, and the INTENSITY of the disapproval is huge - we don't want mandates, taxes, trillion dollar price tages and dozens of new agencies, bureaucracies and rules:
http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2009/09/024603.php
The PEOPLE will be paying these Democrats a visit on November 2010.
The New York Times, DNC house organ, had to skew a poll almost 15% towards the Democrats to get enough faux support for the plan to make it look not-as-bad-as-reality. NYTimes polls have become laughable jokes, fit only to keep liberal readers complacently uninformed about the real opposition to Obama's agenda.
Health care reform will pass anyway
...the only uncertainty is how many of the items favored by the left will survive.
The Dems have 50+ more votes in the House and an almost filibuster-proof Senate majority now. Moderate/centrist Democrats will decide the fate of the reform effort -- not Republicans. Opinion polls show the public is convinced that the GOP has no ideas and is basically not willing to support any reform of the current system, e.g. Max Baucus received nothing in return despite really bending over backwards to accomodate the GOP.
MARCU$