Showing posts with label daschle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label daschle. Show all posts

Saturday, August 01, 2009

Has Obama lost healthcare reform?

Way back, on February 1st--yes, six months ago it was--I blogged about the Tom Daschle nomination fiasco as a major blow for healthcare reform. Not because I cared for Daschle. But because he would have been an influential cabinet secretary with extensive legislative connections--the kind of combination needed for all the political stuff that needed to happen. Further, the fiasco meant that Team Obama was back sorting through the list of qualified people, and more time was therefore going to be lost in the process.

Through all this, Obama played healthcare over-carefully. He tried to stay only at the big picture level and succeeded. And, at the same time, he did not seem to come across as eagerly and loudly a supporter of "his" healthcare proposals as he did when it came to the stimulus bill. In fact, one might want to refresh memories on how he went aroudn trumpeting the stimulus bill, bank rescue operations and, of course, the auto industry bailout where he even came across as the country's car dealer-in-chief.

Clive Crook has written more about this aloofness of Obama's when it comes to healthcare, and why reform is stalling:

This failure has three separate aspects. First, though politicians and commentators talk about the president’s plan, he does not have one. Learning the lessons of “Hillarycare” far too well, Mr Obama has set out broad goals for reform and some principles to guide the design, but no more. This self-imposed distance is bad both substantively and politically. It is substantively bad because left to its own devices an unguided, disputatious, difference-splitting Congress was bound to make a hash of it. And it is politically bad because the public understands this.

Opinion is turning against health reform partly because watching this initiative lurch to and fro on Capitol Hill without adult supervision is scary. Anything could happen, thinks the median voter, and probably will. Note too that when the president decided to glide above it all and take credit for whatever emerged, he squandered his political capital. He is still expending his popularity on making the case for reform in the abstract, not on advancing a specific blueprint. That was all right at the outset, but no longer. The debate has moved on to specifics, leaving the president behind.

Mr Obama’s second failure is even more surprising: one of salesmanship. He still pitches for comprehensive reform, but with apparently weakening conviction. In his televised talk on the subject last week, he seemed almost bored.

Worse, the president’s message is at odds with the product taking shape in Congress. This is all about controlling costs, he says: without reform, healthcare will bankrupt the country. That would be an excellent line if Congress was seriously trying to build control of costs into its bills, but it is not. Widening coverage is the priority. So it should be, you might argue – but in that case the president has to sell access and health security as things worth paying for, an entirely different proposition.

Every measure on the table would increase costs. The administration, despite all it says about “bending the curve”, is demanding only deficit-neutrality over 10 years. Every time Mr Obama stresses cost control, he diminishes his credibility.

The third failure goes beyond healthcare. Elected as a moderate, a centrist and a pragmatist, Mr Obama has repeatedly sided with the liberal left of his party on economic policy. The design of the fiscal stimulus, the shape of the budget, and Mr Obama’s willingness at every turn to support higher spending and higher taxes on the better-off – to pay for health reform, social security reform, infrastructure investment, expanded educational opportunities, wage subsidies for the poor, you name it – has delighted the party’s left and alarmed its centrists. The related charge of fiscal indiscipline is starting to stick, and it colours the health debate.

If health reform does go down to defeat, it will not be because of Republican opposition, but because of dissenting conservative Democrats and disaffected moderates in the country at large. In disappointing these people, Mr Obama has badly miscalculated. His political power depends on them. He must take the lead in devising a health reform capable of appealing to the centre. For his own good and the country’s, he needs to be the president the US thought it was electing.

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Obama Considers Tax on Cabinet

President Barack Obama is mulling a controversial new tax program that would require members of his Cabinet to pay taxes owed under the Federal tax code, the White House confirmed today.

While the unorthodox tax proposal is reportedly "only in the planning stages," it is being eyed as a possible way to balance the Federal budget.

"According to projections, if members of the Cabinet actually paid their taxes, we could wind up with a budget surplus in excess of $18.2 billion," said Obama economic adviser Paul Volcker.

Mr. Volcker said he strongly favored the plan, but added, "Fortunately for me, I'm not officially in the Cabinet."

But imposing taxes on Cabinet members may be easier said than done, critics of the plan warn.

"Remember, these people are not used to paying taxes," said one White House source. "They are going to be hopping mad about this."

Another wrinkle in the plan is how the taxes would actually be collected, with President Obama reportedly favoring a cash-at-the-door entry fee for every Cabinet meeting.

"If they don't have the money, they don't get in," said the source. "They're not going to be able to just sail into the White House for free like the Jonas Brothers."

When told of Mr. Obama's plan to make his Cabinet members pay taxes, Fmr. Sen. Tom Daschle responded, "Whew! Sounds like I dodged a bullet."

The world has quite a few funny people, including Andy Borowitz, who wrote that tax piece. I am immensely thankful to all these people who make me laugh.

Politics is about moralizing. Ergo, problems.

Governance involves deciding for people what we can or cannot do. It is a kind of moral police. Most of us fully understand that we don't, and can't, always practice what we preach. But, sometimes the dissonance is too much to ignore. And that is what Tom Daschle ran into. On the one hand, I feel sorry for the guy. On the other hand, this is, unfortunately, the nature of the ballgame--more so in the YouTube era:

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Daschle gone. Good call!

So, now two nominees who have withdrawn because of not quite clean money deals. As someone who was not thrilled with Daschle's nomination, while Howard Dean was shunned, I am glad that Daschle has withdrawn from the race; I like the BBC's title for the news report:
"Obama suffers blow over nominees", which then reports that:
Only hours before Mr Daschle pulled out of the process, Nancy Killefer, nominated by Mr Obama to be the government's budget watchdog also withdrew over tax issues.

In January, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson announced he was withdrawing from consideration as commerce secretary after an investigation was launched into a state contract that had been given to his campaign donors.

Republican Senator Judd Gregg was on Tuesday appointed instead, the second from his party to join Mr Obama's cabinet.

US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner was confirmed last week only after long arguments over his failure to pay $34,000 (£24,500) in taxes he owed until shortly before he was nominated.

Announcing his withdrawal, Mr Daschle, the former Senate Democratic leader, said he would have not been able to operate "with the full faith of Congress and the American people".

He said he would "not be a distraction" to Mr Obama's agenda.

Sunday, February 01, 2009

Healthcare fiasco. Again? Even before the gates opened?

What is with Democratic Presidents and healthcare?  President Clinton bungled it big time, when he had a wonderful opportunity.  President Obama nominated Tom Daschle with the hope that Daschle's legislative experience will be an asset when pushing for healthcare reform.  Well, Daschle is fast dashing those hopes; at least, that is what I sense from this report:
Tom Daschle collected nearly a quarter of a million dollars in fees in the last two years speaking to leaders of the industry President Barack Obama wants him to reform as the administration's health secretary.

That was just a portion of the more than $5.2 million the former South Dakota senator earned as he advised insurers and hospitals and worked in other industries -- real estate, energy and telecommunications among them, according to a financial statement filed with the Office of Government Ethics.

I tell you, this situation would never have happened if Obama had not punished Dr. Howard Dean, but had rewarded him with this critical cabinet position.  Oh well ....