Bredesen Backlash Update: Revenge of the Do-gooders
Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius has jumped ahead of Phil Bredesen on President Obama's list to head the Health and Human Services Department. Politico quotes administration officials as saying Sebelius is the leading contender but Bredesen is still under consideration. In Washington to give a couple of speeches, Sebelius met with Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett. A White House spokesman says Obama "is moving quickly in filling this critical role."![]()
Let's face it. Sebelius has got it all over Bredesen for this job. She was an early supporter of Obama for president. Bredesen didn't get behind Obama until it became obvious he would win the nomination. Along the way, our governor cleverly bad-mouthed Obama, repeatedly telling one of the best campaigners in American political history that he was screwing things up with the Wal-Mart crowd.
That aside, Bredesen is anathema to liberal health care advocates. They just can't manage to overlook all that blood splattering his Italian loafers from the TennCare massacre. And they've been raising a stink about his possible nomination, even going after the first lady.
Politico's Mike Allen reports, "Opposition research has been circulated that outline that 2005 decision, and also highlights the fact that BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, a company with major state dealings, donated $150,000 to the renovation of the governor's mansion. In contrast, advocacy groups see Sebelius' eight year tenure as insurance commissioner as a significant asset to her candidacy."
Bredesen aide Will Pinkston has been gamely defending the governor, who really wants this job: "The fact that someone worked in the managed care business 20 years ago shouldn't preclude the contributions and the ideas they have in the national health care reform debate." But it doesn't matter what Pinkston says. Bredesen's enemies aren't going away. To them, he's a heartless, penny-pinching bureaucrat.
The latest attack: "For Obama to select a conservative Democrat whose methods health care advocates have long denounced would be an inexplicable act of provocation towards his base and towards liberal activists that regard health care as one of the most important issues of the day."
Advocacy groups don't know much about Sebelius' views on health care. But so what? With the advocates, at this point, it's anybody but Bredesen.




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