Obama taps ex-Senate chief to head health agency
By Donna Smith
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President-elect Barack Obama has chosen Tom Daschle, a key early supporter and former U.S. Senate leader, as his top official to overhaul the U.S. healthcare system, two Democratic sources said on Wednesday.
By turning to the former Democratic leader to serve as his health and human services secretary, Obama has signalled that his plan to extend health coverage to the 47 million Americans who lack insurance will be a high priority when he takes office on January 20.
Daschle will be well-placed to work with Congress and pull together various interest groups to try to build consensus behind a sweeping overhaul of the U.S. healthcare system, a $2.3 trillion industry that accounts for about 16 percent of the U.S. economy.
"It's an excellent choice," said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, a Montana Democrat. "He knows the Senate, he knows healthcare."
Daschle will likely face easy confirmation by his former Senate colleagues. But his wife Linda's lobbying activities, mostly for the aviation industry, could come under scrutiny.
Although she recused herself from lobbying the Senate while her husband served there, Republicans made it an issue in the 2004 election that unseated Daschle as the U.S. senator from South Dakota.
News reports said Linda Daschle would leave her current lobbying position at the end of the year to start her own public policy firm where she will not lobby.
Since losing his re-election bid in 2004, Daschle has worked as a public-policy adviser for the law firm Alston and Bird. Continued...



