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  1. #1
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Sebelius, ObamaCare, Collusion, Big Cash, Scandal – It’s All Here

    Sebelius, ObamaCare, Collusion, Big Cash, Scandal – It’s All Here

    BY CULTURAL LIMITS on FEBRUARY 17, 2014 • ( 4 )



    Sorry, Katie. They found the emails

    Last summer, as the Foggy Bottom Theater of Scandal blockbusters exploded on Capitol Hill, a Black Box production was underway in the basement around the corner, or under a bridge or something. It was reported at the time that Kathleen Sebelius was soliciting groups that the department of Health and Human Services had relationships with or directly regulated to help bankroll Enroll America, a non-profit organized to get people signed up for ObamaCare.
    Largely forgotten now as the key antagonist, Madama Sebelius, went the chair in front of the House Energy and Commerce Committee right before Halloween while the ObamaCare website rollout was bombing, the HHS cabinet member was engaged in questionably ethical fundraising.
    Okay, it’s not questionable. It was unethical.
    Guess what. It’s looks like she may still be doing it:

    Eight months after the news broke, Sebelius’ spokeswoman last Friday sidestepped questions from the Washington Examiner on whether her boss has continued to solicit funds from outside groups for Enroll America’s efforts.
    “The secretary has engaged in a sustained, aggressive outreach campaign to reach as many Americans as possible during open enrollment,” HHS spokeswoman Joanne Peters said in an emailed statement Friday afternoon.
    “We’re [sic] have been working closely with a range of partners groups across the country to reach the uninsured, and to help get them enrolled in quality, affordable health insurance,” Peters continued.
    She did not respond to a follow-up question specifically asking whether Sebelius has continued the fundraising.
    If Sebelius is not doing any fundraising, why not answer the question?
    Even more curious is the pattern of communication the Washington Examiner found in emails from the HHS:

    Peters made the statement in response to several questions the Washington Examiner posed about the details of emails between Enroll America officials and Health and Human Services aides, including some with staffers from the White House Office of Public Engagement.
    The emails, which the Washington Examiner obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request, reveal a close working relationship between top HHS aides, Sebelius, Enroll America and former White House aides on their fundraising efforts.
    Really? Hmm.
    The Examiner asked whether Sebelius believed the close working relationship is appropriate and whether Sebelius has continued fundraising for Enroll America since news first broke about the solicitations last May.
    In addition to weekly conference calls between Enroll America staffers and key HHS aides, the emails show the nonprofit’s efforts to urge HHS aides and Sebelius herself to solicit funds on its behalf.
    But here’s the better question: Did any of the solicitations result in any actual funds raised?
    Under fire for the fundraising, a month later, Sebelius told the House Education and Workforce Committee that she has directly solicited two groups HHS does not regulate — the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and H&R Block. She also said she called three other groups HHS regulates but asked them only for support and didn’t request a donation: Kaiser Permanente, Johnson & Johnson, and Ascension Health.
    The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a nonprofit that supports anti-obesity and other health outreach campaigns, last year said it had contributed $14 million to Enroll America. It owns more than $1 billion worth of stock in Johnson & Johnson, which HHS regulates. The Food and Drug Administration, which is part of HHS, regulates Johnson & Johnson’s drugs and medical devices.
    H&R Block last year said it has doled out $500,000 to the group. As the country’s largest tax services provider, the company stands to reap a windfall from new business in advising Americans whether they qualify for Obamacare tax credits or must pay a penalty for failing to buy insurance.
    Kaiser Permanente, which has representatives on Enroll America’s board, also has donated. As of November of last year, Enroll America officials said the group has raised $27 million so far from entities that include the Ford Foundation, the California Endowment, the Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust, Saint Luke’s Health Initiatives, the Tennessee Hospital Association and Catholic Health Initiatives.
    I don’t know about anyone else, but it seriously looks like there’s more than a little bit of cross pollination here. Sebelius calls five places. Three of them donate big money to Enroll America, and one has hands in the cookie jar. One entity – a for profit company – will directly get more business from more people signing up for government sponsored health insurance. The government entity that regulates the industry is headed by one of the outreach, uh, workers. Does the circle get any more closed?
    Oh, no. No conflict of interest here. Nothing to see. Move along.
    According to the Washington Examiner exclusive piece quoted, members of congress have requested an investigation as to any illegalities by Sebelius and company from the Government Accountability Office. Great. But so far, with the Obama Administration, investigations take forever and by the time any useful information is dug out of the reams of paper the cabinet departments provide, any traction the stories have is lost and the people forget.
    In this case, there wasn’t much traction to begin with as this is the one scandal of the summer of 2013 that had little personal appeal to the public, but it is the one that demonstrates just exactly how close ties between government and industry result in screwing over the American people.
    The entire purpose of Enroll America is to get as many Americans as possible signed up for ObamaCare during the open enrollment period which is happening right now. Those who will have increased business thanks to the law are investing in that mission, which is to be expected. But solicitation help from a cabinet level government official in getting those investments secured? That just should not be.
    Benghazi, the Justice Department wiretapping of journalists’ communications, IRS stonewalling and harassment of politically conservative groups – yeah, this was all bad and the people immediately understood what it meant.
    However, no government official should be colluding with private industry for their benefit, as the emails referenced above indicate is happening.
    Call it the out of sight, out of mind forgotten scandal. Call it more of the Kathleen Sebelius snow job. Doesn’t matter.
    It’s still wrong – and the MSM is ignoring it.

    https://mikesright.wordpress.com/201...-its-all-here/
    Last edited by AirborneSapper7; 02-18-2014 at 03:27 PM.
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  2. #2
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Exclusive: HHS won't say if Sebelius is fundraising for Obamacare

    BY SUSAN CRABTREE | FEBRUARY 17, 2014 AT 8:05 AM

    TOPICS: WHITE HOUSE OBAMACARE PENNAVE ETHICS KATHLEEN SEBELIUS HHS ENROLL AMERICA

    First in a series of stories on the Obama administration's outside fundraising efforts to promote Obamacare enrollment.
    Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and other department staff may be continuing to solicit private donations to help an outside group promote the president's health care law as the administration works to boost enrollment figures after a troubled fall rollout.
    News last May that Sebelius had asked business executives and nonprofit groups to donate toEnroll America, a nonprofit organization formed to help encourage millions of Americans to sign up for the new Obamacare insurance exchanges, provoked an uproar among Republicans on Capitol Hill.
    Two GOP-led House committees launched investigations, and several Republican senators called on the Health and Human Services inspector general to investigate Sebelius' fundraising drive, which watchdogs have described as an unethical shakedown for cash.
    Eight months after the news broke, Sebelius' spokeswoman last Friday sidestepped questions from the Washington Examiner on whether her boss has continued to solicit funds from outside groups for Enroll America's efforts.
    “The secretary has engaged in a sustained, aggressive outreach campaign to reach as many Americans as possible during open enrollment,” HHS spokeswoman Joanne Peters said in an emailed statement Friday afternoon.
    “We're [sic] have been working closely with a range of partners groups across the country to reach the uninsured, and to help get them enrolled in quality, affordable health insurance,” Peters continued.
    She did not respond to a follow-up question specifically asking whether Sebelius has continued the fundraising.
    Peters made the statement in response to several questions the Washington Examiner posed about the details of emails between Enroll America officials and Health and Human Services aides, including some with staffers from the White House Office of Public Engagement.
    The emails, which the Washington Examiner obtained through a Freedom of Information Actrequest, reveal a close working relationship between top HHS aides, Sebelius, Enroll America and former White House aides on their fundraising efforts.
    The Examiner asked whether Sebelius believed the close working relationship is appropriate and whether Sebelius has continued fundraising for Enroll America since news first broke about the solicitations last May.
    In addition to weekly conference calls between Enroll America staffers and key HHS aides, the emails show the nonprofit's efforts to urge HHS aides and Sebelius herself to solicit funds on its behalf.
    In one Feb. 26, 2013, email with the subject line “Re: H/R block,” Enroll America President Anne Filipic wrote to Anton Gunn, the then-head of HHS's Office of External Affairs, and Sol Ross, the director of business outreach in the department's Intergovernmental and External Affairs Office.
    She mentioned a meeting Sebelius had with H&R Block executives ahead of their own meeting scheduled for that day and said she wanted to put the matter “at the top of your inbox” to make sure “we're all on the same page in terms of the asks we will make of them.”
    “We are meeting with H&R Block tomorrow and are eager to touch base in advance of that,” Filipic wrote. “I know the secretary met with them yesterday and just want to be sure we're all on the same page in terms of the asks we will make of them.”
    Filipic worked for President Barack Obama as deputy director of White House public engagement before helping create Enroll America.
    In another email between Filipic and Gunn with the subject “H&R,” Filipic asked whether a call from “KGS is in the works” and urges HHS action to get “that number up” — an apparent reference to a fundraising goal.
    “Hey Anton — Martine mentioned that you all have a conversation with Theresa and the H&R team scheduled for today. We're trying to figure out next steps here (really need to get back to them this week) and are wondering if a call from KGS is in the works. Could you share your thoughts after you talk with Theresa?” Filipic wrote.
    “We'd really love the help getting that number up but don't want to miss the opportunity here, and they've made clear they are on a quick timeline. I'll be eager for your thoughts!” she concluded.
    The Washington Examiner made the FOIA request last June for “any and all [HHS] emails containing the term Enroll America.” The HHS FOIA office partially responded to the request Jan. 30.
    The FOIA office located 448 pages of emails and documents shared between Enroll America and HHS, and released 257 pages of them. The office delayed release of another 179 pages of “responsive records” it said were “under review for consultation” and could not provide an estimate for how long the review would take.
    In addition, the FOIA office redacted portions of the emails they provided, along with 12 pages in their entirety under an exemption that permits the withholding of records which are “deliberative in nature and pre-decisional and contains staff advice, opinion and recommendation.”
    The exemption is intended to preserve free and candid internal dialogue leading to decision-making, the office said.
    A May 10 Washington Post article said Sebelius had contacted several private entities, including some in the health care industry, and asked them to contribute to Enroll America, which is made up of Obama campaign loyalists and former White House staffers.
    The article quoted Ellen Murray, assistant secretary for financial resources at HHS, saying that the fundraising was an effort to “come up with a Plan B” once Congress denied funding to promote the Affordable Care Act's fall enrollment drive.
    Under fire for the fundraising, a month later, Sebelius told the House Education and Workforce Committee that she has directly solicited two groups HHS does not regulate — the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and H&R Block. She also said she called three other groups HHS regulates but asked them only for support and didn't request a donation: Kaiser Permanente, Johnson & Johnson, and Ascension Health.
    The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a nonprofit that supports anti-obesity and other health outreach campaigns, last year said it had contributed $14 million to Enroll America. It owns more than $1 billion worth of stock in Johnson & Johnson, which HHS regulates. The Food and Drug Administration, which is part of HHS, regulates Johnson & Johnson's drugs and medical devices.
    H&R Block last year said it has doled out $500,000 to the group. As the country's largest tax services provider, the company stands to reap a windfall from new business in advising Americans whether they qualify for Obamacare tax credits or must pay a penalty for failing to buy insurance.
    Kaiser Permanente, which has representatives on Enroll America's board, also has donated. As of November of last year, Enroll America officials said the group has raised $27 million so far from entities that include the Ford Foundation, the California Endowment, the Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust, Saint Luke's Health Initiatives, the Tennessee Hospital Association and Catholic Health Initiatives.
    Sen. Lamar Alexander, a Republican from Tennessee and the ranking member of the Senate committee that oversees health policy, has argued that Sebelius' efforts are illegal because Congress has specifically denied funds for the Affordable Care Act's implementation and compared her fundraising to the Iran-Contra scandal.
    Alexander and other Republicans in Congress have asked the Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, and the HHS inspector general to look into the extent Sebelius and her staff are coordinating with Enroll America and other organizations.
    Republicans say the Sebelius fundraising drive violates the federal Anti-Deficiency Act, which prohibits government agencies from accepting voluntary services or donations. But HHS officials contend that a section of the Public Service Act specifically permits the secretary to ask outside companies and entities to write checks to support health programs.
    That act does not allow the White House to engage in the same type of solicitation of private entities, and White House officials have said they did not sign off on the fundraising although they were generally aware of the outreach plans.
    Sebelius and House Democrats argue that engaging public-private partnerships to help promote the law is similar to what President George W. Bush's administration did to promote the prescription drug benefit in Medicare Part D expansion and the Children's Health Insurance Program.
    Watchdog and good-government groups disagree over whether Sebelius violated federal laws with the fundraising, but they all say asking private companies to financially support Obamacare's rollout raises serious ethical questions.
    “Obviously, there’s an appearance problem,” said Melanie Sloan, the executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. “If she was soliciting for a Girl Scout troop in her neighborhood — something totally unrelated to health care — I don’t think you would have these questions, but she is charged with implementing the most significant health care changes in a generation.”
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  3. #3
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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