May 13, 2009 11:38 AM

Obama To Tap Sebelius for HHS Secretary

(AP)  Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius is President Barack Obama's choice for secretary of health and human services, a White House source said Saturday.

The source, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said Obama will formally announce the nomination on Monday.

A Democratic source in Kansas confirmed that Obama has spoken to Sebelius and said an announcement was expected this week. The source was close to the governor but not authorized to make the announcement and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Sebelius, 60, was an early Obama supporter and a finalist for Obama's ticket before he picked Joe Biden for vice president. During the general election campaign, she spent 24 days stumping for Obama in 16 states, including key battlegrounds such as Colorado, Florida, Indiana, North Carolina Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Her name had been floated for several Cabinet posts. She said in December that she had removed herself from consideration from a Cabinet job, citing Kansas' budget problems that needed her attention.

Obama's first choice for HHS, former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, withdrew after disclosing he had failed to pay $140,000 taxes and interest.

Sebelius drew praise for the consumer watchdog role she played as Kansas insurance commissioner for eight years before she became governor.

She is in the middle of her second term as governor and is legally barred from seeking a third term next year. Many Democrats had hoped Sebelius would finish her term and run for the U.S. Senate seat that Republican Sam Brownback is giving up in 2010.

Kansas has not elected a Democrat to the Senate since 1932, and Sebelius was seen as the best chance for breaking that string. She comes from a strong political family. Her father, John Gilligan, was the governor of Ohio in 1971-75, making them the only father-daughter governors in U.S. history.

Abortion foes strongly oppose Sebelius because she once had a reception attended by a late-term abortion provider who now faces criminal charges. Democrats say there was never any doubt that Obama would appoint an HHS secretary who supports abortion rights.

Sebelius will be subject to confirmation by the Democratic-controlled Senate.

During the primary and general election campaigns Sebelius worked tirelessly for Obama. Some Democrats in Kansas believe her endorsement of Obama over Hillary Rodham Clinton in January 2008 helped boost him to an overwhelming victory in the state's Democratic caucuses.

Some Democrats have said she has built a solid and even close relationship with Obama, gaining his trust.

National party circles have buzzed about her since she won her first term as governor in GOP-leaning Kansas in 2002. Party leaders have portrayed her as someone who has been able to attract support from moderate Republicans and independent voters.

She served a year as chairwoman of the Democratic Governors Association - a group Bill Clinton once led - and gave the party's response to President Bush's last State of the Union address.

Sebelius came to Kansas to work in the Department of Corrections in 1975, and three years later, she became the executive director of the Kansas trial lawyers' association. She ran for a seat in the Kansas House in 1986 and represented a left-of-center Topeka, Kan., district for eight years.

Sebelius won the first of two terms as insurance commissioner in 1994. Her image as a no-nonsense administrator and consumer advocate helped her in her first race for governor.

But she also has proven to be a prodigious fundraiser, collecting about $10 million in cash contributions for her two gubernatorial campaigns.

The Kansas Democratic Party has flourished during her governorship, raising $1.9 million over the past two years. Also, her political action committee, the Bluestem Fund, raised more than $668,000 during the same period.

Nationally, Democrats routinely describe Sebelius as a success at finding bipartisan solutions in a GOP-leaning state. She's long said addressing rising health care costs and making sure more people have coverage are top priorities for her as governor.

But she's often found her ambitions frustrated by Republican legislators who are wary of expanding government and prefer measures that help people find private insurance.

Late in 2004, she proposed raising tobacco taxes by $50 million a year to finance health care initiatives, and the Legislature largely ignored the idea in 2005.

She opened her second term in January 2007 by calling on legislators to draft a plan to bring universal health coverage to Kansas. But she provided no specifics, and, again, legislators largely ignored her call, favoring instead incremental reforms.

Last year, she backed a 21-point plan from the Kansas Health Policy Authority to phase in $330 million in new spending on health care initiatives over five years, but the package required tobacco tax increases and gained little support among legislators. Later, in assessing the 2008 legislative session, Sebelius told reporters, "The single biggest disappointment in terms of a policy area is health care."

In 2007, the Legislature created a new program to provide state subsidies to poor families so they could buy insurance. The aid was supposed to start this year, but legislators canceled the program in 2008 because they were spooked by its potential cost.

Yet legislators in both parties agree the state has made some progress on health care since Sebelius became governor in January 2003.

The state has expanded cancer screenings, allowed more Kansans can keep their health insurance up to 18 months after leaving their jobs and granted income tax deductions that helped some Kansans lower their insurance costs.

It also has increased funding for "safety net" clinics, expanded state medical and dental coverage for pregnant women and started no-interest loans to help small businesses form associations to provide health plans for employees.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 40 Comments
by owlwomanxxxx March 2, 2009 3:18 PM EST
that guy claiming that her nomination is an insult to Catholics should consider how their ideology insults women
Reply to this comment
by RealAmerican1 March 2, 2009 9:07 AM EST
I was watching Howeird Dean this morning whining about not getting the job over this Kansas Govenator chick and it dawned on me why he didn't.....

Since a qualified medical doctor with a history of actually managing an orgranization can't get the job over some twist with no more qualifications than the fact she has a blood lust for slaughter babies while they sleep peacefully in their motherss womb.....

Can any doubt remain, this is simply a case of Howeird not being able to come up with nearly as much PAY so he can PLAY on El Messiah's team as the skirt did???

Definetly not in my mindseye.
Reply to this comment
by RealAmerican1 March 1, 2009 11:49 PM EST
Given the fact a substancial amount of this TRILLION dollar NObama RIPOFF of America is going to increase the numbers of Demwit Party sponsored and funded Baby Slaughtering Houses all across America, I think Sebelius is the perfect choice.

She so reminds me of a female version of Michale Dukakis. Since, as with most of these Demwit minions, there seems to be nothing either of them enjoy more than the blood of millions of Americas babies on their hands.
Reply to this comment
by taxed2debt March 1, 2009 6:42 PM EST
Isn't Kansas close to bankruptcy? Hasn't she been the Governor there for almost 2 terms? And BHO wants to reward her with this position? Let's not get the best person for the job - let's reward this idiot because she stumped on the campaign trail for another idiot... Sounds like the 21st century version of the 'Good ole boy club'.
Reply to this comment
by eightsigma March 1, 2009 2:30 PM EST
" Dr. Howard Dean, M.D. should be the Choice. for Secretary of Health and Human Services. Anyone else feel the same way?"

I think Howard Dean would have been a good choice. I'm inclined to give Sibelius a chance. Kind of like giving Obama a chance.
Reply to this comment
by cattiej March 1, 2009 2:17 PM EST
Obama should have picked Dr. Howard Dean, M.D. for this position of HHS Secretary. This position would be ideal for him as he knows whats going on in Washington, the politicans know him, he is a Medical Doctor who knows what needs to be done to bring our Health System to the level it should be for all Americans.
Sebelius was in the Correction system, and the Insurance Industry. She is a Governor who doesn't have any experience in Washington. She IS GOOD AT RAISING MONEY FOR OBAMA DURING THE CAMPAIGN. This is NOT a good reason to put her in the office of Secretary of HHS. Bad Choice on Obama's part.
Dr. Howard Dean, M.D. should be the Choice. for Secretary of Health and Human Services. Anyone else feel the same way?
Reply to this comment
by eightsigma March 1, 2009 2:01 PM EST
Posted by soldat44 at 10:49 AM : Mar 1, 2009
" There is only One."
You are wrong.
Reply to this comment
by soldat44 March 1, 2009 1:50 PM EST
Hail Mary,
Full of Grace,
The Lord is with thee.
Blessed art thou among women,
and blessed is the fruit
of thy womb, Jesus.
Holy Mary,
Mother of God,
pray for us sinners now,
and at the hour of death.

Amen.
Reply to this comment
by soldat44 March 1, 2009 1:49 PM EST
soldat44 "That's your opinion, Not God's. Therein lies the problem."
Agreed. My God says you are wrong.
Now what shall we do about the disagreement between our Gods?
Posted by eightsigma at 10:31 AM : Mar 1, 2009

There is only One. Unless you are a member of the Church of Oprah.
Reply to this comment
by soldat44 March 1, 2009 1:47 PM EST
The whole history of these books [the Gospels] is so defective and doubtful that it seems vain to attempt minute enquiry into it: and such tricks have been played with their text, and with the texts of other books relating to them, that we have a right, from that cause, to entertain much doubt what parts of them are genuine. In the New Testament there is internal evidence that parts of it have proceeded from an extraordinary man; and that other parts are of the fabric of very inferior minds. It is as easy to separate those parts, as to pick out diamonds from dunghills.

-Thomas Jefferson, letter to John Adams, January 24, 1814
Posted by eightsigma at 10:38 AM : Mar 1, 2009

Are you telling all of us that you accept T. Jefferson as your expert on Divine Scripture?
Reply to this comment
See all 40 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook