Friday, April 11, 2014

Sebelius Resigns

Good riddance to bad rubbish

The Blaze:

Kathleen Sebelius to Resign as Head of HHS

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has resigned from the Obama administration, a move that comes just months after Americans began signing up for health insurance coverage under Obamacare.
President Barack Obama accepted her resignation earlier this week and will nominate the Office of Management and Budget’s Sylvia Matthews Burwell, 48, as the next head of the HHS, the New York Times reported.
“The president wants to make sure we have a proven manager and relentless implementer in the job over there, which is why he is going to nominate Sylvia,” said Denis McDonough, the White House chief of staff, according to the Times.
The former governor of Kansas and one of the longest-serving members of Obama’s cabinet, with nearly five years under her belt, Sebelius, 65, was one of the chief architects of the Affordable Care Act, helping to get the law passed through Congress in 2010 and helping to shape its various mandates.
However, after the disastrous launch of the healthcare.gov website in October 2013, Sebelius’ relationship with the Obama White House reportedly became strained as top administration officials scrambled for answers to what quickly became a national embarrassment. Along with a handful of aides, Obama at one point blamed HHS for supposedly failing to provide his cabinet with more information on the status of the website’s health prior to its launch.
Ignoring repeated and increasingly loud calls to fire Sebelius, Obama instead tapped Office of Management and Budget director Jeffrey Zients to save the website and get it in halfway working order.
The site was eventually put in better order, but not before Sebelius began to shrink from the public eye. Recall that when the president took a “victory lap” in the Rose Garden earlier this month and announced that roughly 7.1 million Americans had signed up for health insurance through the online exchanges, Sebelius was not present at his side.
McDonough said Sebelius approached the president last month to discuss her future in his administration.
“What was clear is that she thought that it was time to transition the leadership to somebody else,” he said. “She’s made clear in other comments publicly that she recognizes that she takes a lot of the incoming. She does hope — all of us hope — that we can get beyond the partisan sniping.”
The White House maintains that Sebelius’ sudden departure was her choice and that she was not forced out.
Although she weathered months of questions and criticism from both her employer and critics over the disastrous implementation of the Affordable Care Act, she said she hopes her exit will ignite a new era of bipartisan cooperation in the nation’s capital.
“If I could take something along with me,” she said, according to the Times, it would be “all the animosity. If that could just leave with me, and we could get to a new chapter, that would be terrific.”
But Sebelius’ departure will likely set the stage for a series of contentious confirmation hearings for Burwell as Republicans and Democrats continue to battle over the controversial health care law going into the fall midterm elections.

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