From The Road
January 25, 2008 12:48 PM

Obama Hears Cries for Help

(CBS)
From CBS News National Correspondent Dean Reynolds:

CHARLESTON, S.C. -- It was billed as a roundtable conversation with plain folks at Jason’s Deli in Charleston. Barack Obama joined four women at a table for a conversation – the same kind of thing he’s done countless times in his campaign.

Obama spoke to the women of his plans to change the tax code, to provide tax breaks to low-income wage earners and home owners, to improve a tax credit for the same folks, to reform the family and medical leave act and generally to make health care more affordable.

Christina Stewart, a dance teacher, cancer survivor, and volunteer instructor of underprivileged children brought her daughter, Camille.

Camille is eight years old. She has cerebral palsy and is profoundly disabled. She cannot walk. She cannot speak.

“We live a life that is unbelievable,” Mrs. Stewart told Obama. Unbelievable because her daughter has been uninsurable, save for very basic Medicaid coverage that doesn’t come close to addressing her needs.

Mrs. Stewart currently pays $200-a-month out of her own pocket for various medications such as Prilosec because her daughter suffers from “excruciating” acid reflux. Medicaid won’t pay for it. Indeed, Medicaid will pay only for one hour of physical therapy for Camille, according to her mother.

“It is horrible to watch my child suffer,” she said as she recounted the long waits she endures for the Medicaid care, the lack of schooling for a child with special needs and her consuming dread of what will happen to Camille if she is forced to institutionalize her.

“It makes no sense for this to happen in the United States,” she told Obama. “Why does this happen in the United States?”

Obama was riveted by her story. He told her of his plan to reform Medicaid, to do away with wasteful spending that would free up better care for her daughter.

But here’s the thing: when Obama and Mrs. Stewart had this conversation, Camille was no longer between them. because after initially placing her at the senator’s side, after the photographers captured both in the same frame, and after mouthing some faint sounds that had the very slight potential of being disruptive, Camille was wheeled away. First to the edge of the deli, then outside altogether.

I don’t doubt Obama’s concern for the child and children like her. His policies are designed to address such incredible misfortune. But Camille today was basically a political prop. Someone to be seen but not heard – even if she could speak.

Though politics is full of sentimentality and syrup, it is also a very brusque, impersonal kind of undertaking. This was such an occasion.

“Where’s my beautiful daughter?” Mrs. Stewart asked after the conversation ended. “She’s outside in a van,” was the response.

As we were leaving i asked her if she was satisfied by what she’d heard.

“It was very good,” she said, “But I need more time to hear more.”

Meanwhile, she said, she thinks John Edwards has a better plan to deal with Camille’s needs.

Then she headed out to the parking lot to resume her life with Camille.
Tags:
Obama ,
South Carolina
Topics:
Barack Obama
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by camillesdad1 January 26, 2008 1:37 AM EST
Hi, Guys -

This is Bill Stewart - Camille''s dad.

Camille spent quite a bit of the time sitting next to Senator Obama, eating a muffin, drinking from her sippy cup, and happily scattering crumbs on his suit. She was treated most courteously by the Senator and the other participants.

Her mom, Christina, asked our caregiver, Kristin (also known as, "the young woman who saves our lives") to take Camille outside when she started to get a little loud, as she can get REEEAAALLY loud with little warning when she is bored (after healthcare concerns, boredom is the scariest thing a special needs parent can face - Summer break from school is like a mean trick).

We''re both up in the air about tomorrow''s primary, as we are most in agreement with Edwards, but feel that Obama may be a better place for our vote.

Hope that calms everybody''s concerns.
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by amy0206 January 25, 2008 10:39 PM EST
You''re kidding, right?

We''re supposed to believe that "someone" kidnapped a child and shoved her in a van during an Obama press event and the mother is nonchalantly talking about Edwards healthcare plan as she''s walking to her car?

I''m no crack journalist, but there''s a lot of holes in this story. And I''ve seen better sourcing in hit pieces on the FreeRepublic.
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by ericrsiny January 25, 2008 9:01 PM EST
I would be very surprised to see this story or the other one about Obama''s staged quotes anywhere else. There seems to be a media blackout of questionable things by Obama or things that might paint him in a bad light.
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by jade7243-2009 January 25, 2008 6:50 PM EST
Maybe, it would have more of "prop" if little Camille had been left there, and you and the rest of the media would complain that Sen. Obama was "pandering" and and staging "syrupy photo ops" to gin up votes.

Some days you can''t win for losing. I think it was better for Camille to go and wait for Mom elsewhere, so if she became more agitated or animated she could express herself without disrupting the adults.

Camille''s mom will learn that both Obama and Edwards will work hard to help her and her daughter. and under both Senators'' plan, she would be covered with health insurance.
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