By The Prowler on 7.27.09 @ 6:10AM
Political healing in the Gates case. Michelle's patient dumping.
DDB sings Obama the Beautiful.
GATES CLOSED
It wasn't out of a need for racial healing that President
Barack Obama reached out to his old friend,
Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates, Jr., and
Cambridge Police Sgt. James Crowley.
"We were looking at House hearings on the matter moving fairly
quickly, and that wasn't going to be good for us or for Gates,"
says a White House source. "We needed this thing to go away and
go away fast."
Early Friday, the White House got wind of Rep.
Edolphus Towns' interest in
holding hearings into the matter of Gates' arrest, and more
broadly looking into the issue of racial profiling by law
enforcement. Towns is chairman of the House Oversight and
Government Reform Committee, as well as the senior House
Democratic Member of the Congressional Black Caucus.
Adding to the desire to get the story buried was the media's
seeming refusal to let the story drop. By noon Friday, House
press secretary Robert Gibbs, along with other
senior White House officials, recommended that Obama either walk
back his statement further than he did on Thursday, or take
proactive action.
"The President chose action, in part because we saw this story
eclipsing other issues and narratives that we needed front and
center for August," says the White House source. "We didn't need
House hearings keeping the story alive into August and then into
the fall, when the hearings most likely would have been held. We
have more important issues to deal with than this."
MICHELLE'S DUMPING DESIGNS
Republicans on Capitol Hill are taking a fresh look at one of the
seedier Chicago stories from Barack and Michelle Obama's past in
ratcheting up the debate on Obamacare: the University of Chicago
Hospital's "Urban Health Initiative," which Michelle
Obama ran prior to her taking a leave of absence to
campaign with her husband in 2007.
Because of the medical center's location on the South Side of
Chicago, a large number of indigent patients, without health
insurance, were using the hospital's emergency room for care. The
nonprofit hospital, which in 2007 made more than $100 million in
profits, largely because its beds and facilities were used by
paying patients and those fully insured, paid Mrs. Obama to
oversee the Urban Health Initiative program that identified
indigent patients and then steered them to other area medical
facilities. In fact, some of those profits came from Canadian
citizens who traveled to the U.S. for medical procedures they
could not get due to Canada's restrictive national health care
programs.
It wasn't just Obama's wife who was involved in creating the
program. Senior White House adviser and political
strategist, David Axelrod, and his PR firm in
Chicago were retained to develop a media campaign to encourage
area residents not to use University of Chicago as a medical
facility. Senior White House official, and Obama friend,
Valerie Jarrett served on the board of directors
of the hospital and approved the plan for the Urban Health
Initiative, and the hiring of Axelrod. And on the recommendation
of then Senator Obama, Dr. Eric Whitaker, was
named director of the Initiative in late 2007, after serving as
the director of the Illinois Department of Public Health, a job
he got after Obama recommended him to then Gov. Rod
Blagojevich via another Obama crony, Tony
Rezko, a fund-raiser for Obama and now a convicted felon
on federal corruption charges.
Candidate Obama thought enough of the program to tout it as an
example of how health care reform should be done. When asked
about the program during the 2008 presidential campaign,
Ben LaBolt, a campaign spokesman, said, "Senator
Obama sees community health centers as a vital part of efforts to
invest in prevention and reduce costs."
But as more reporters focused on Mrs. Obama's health care
initiative, the campaign started to backtrack, particularly when
local Chicago ward bosses started making claims that Mrs. Obama's
program was nothing more than "patient dumping."
In February 2009, the program took another hit, when the
president of the American College of Emergency Physicians, Dr.
Nick Jouriles, said, "The medical center is
reducing emergency care access to its local community, while at
the same time, opening a 'side door' to a 'specialty intake area'
to provide emergency care to medical center private patients.
This is a dangerous precedent that could have catastrophic
effects in poor neighborhoods across the country."
That statement came after local news reports highlighted the
story of Dontae Adams, young Medicaid patient
who was rushed to University of Chicago Hospital after a pit bull
attack, was treated with painkillers and a tetanus shot, but then
was refused admission for surgery. Adams' mother was forced to
take him on an hour-long bus ride to another hospital for the
facial surgery.
Then-Senator Obama took some flack back in 2007 for attempting to
get a $1 million earmark cleared through the Senate for his
wife's hospital. Ultimately, that earmark was not approved.
YES WE CANNES
While the U.S. State Department has not asked for the assistance,
some global public relations and advertising firms are doing
their part to help the Obama Administration succeed overseas.
According to sources inside DDB Worldwide, one
of the world's most prestigious advertising and PR firms, some
executives have prepared recommended talking points and a
suggested image campaign for incoming Obama Administration U.S
ambassadors and counsel generals, particularly in Europe and
Asia.
One of the recommendations, according to sources: American
officials shouldn't identify themselves as representatives
of the United States. Rather, to build on his personal popularity
abroad, they should identify themselves as a "representative of
President Barack Obama."
DDB, according to the source, was not solicited by the government
to undertake the PR effort. Rather, it was done by a few
employees supportive of the Obama Administration. Senior DDB
executives, however, have made fairly public efforts to
tout the Obama Administration overseas. In May, DDB CEO
Chuck Brymer and DDB CCO Bob
Scarpelli invited senior Obama political adviser
David Plouffe to speak at the firm's conference
during the Cannes film festival.