Obama Praises the Resigning Sebelius, Introduces Nominee Mathews Burwell, at White House Event

April 11, 2014
At an event in the White House Rose Garden, President Obama on April 11 accepted the resignation of Kathleen Sebelius as Secretary of HHS, and announced the nomination of Sylvia Mathews Burwell, currently the Director of the OMB, to replace Sebelius.

At an event in the White House Rose Garden, President Barack Obama on April 11 accepted the resignation of Kathleen Sebelius as Secretary of Health and Human Services, and officially announced the nomination of Sylvia Mathews Burwell, currently the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, to replace Sebelius, who has spent five years as HHS Secretary and who oversaw the transition to the implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

President Obama, with Vice President Joe Biden behind him and Sebelius and Mathews Burwell standing on either side of him, began by heaping praise on Sebelius for her accomplishments in the HHS Secretary post, despite media reports that have indicated that he was deeply upset over technical problems that dogged the first months of the healthcare.gov website, the consumer portal for purchasing health insurance from the federally run health insurance exchange entity.

Sylvia Mathews Burwell speaks as Kathleen Sebelius
looks on, during White House event April 11

 “When I nominated Kathleen more than five years ago,” the President said, “I had gotten to know Kathleen when she was governor in Kansas, and she was a great adviser and supporter during my presidential campaign, so I knew she could handle this tough job.”  After praising Sebelius for managing a flu epidemic that raged immediately after Sebelius came into her position, Obama went on to say, “She’s fought to improve children’s health from birth to kindergarten, to expand maternal health… she’s been a tireless advocate for women’s health”; and she’s overseen an expansion of the focus on behavioral health. “But of course, what Kathleen will go down in history for was serving as Secretary of Health and Human Services when the United States of America finally declared that health care was not a privilege but a right for every single citizen of these United States of America.”

Obama added that “Kathleen has been here through the long fight to get the Affordable Care Act passed,” and to get it fully implemented. “She’s got bumps, I’ve got bumps and bruises… but we did it because we knew that all across the country, there were people who had put off buying a home… we had met families who had seen their children suffer because of the uncertainty of healthcare; and we were committed to get this done, and that’s what we’ve done. Yes, we lost the first quarter of open enrollment because of problems with healthcare.gov, and there were problems. But Kathleen and her team got it done. And the final score speaks for itself: there are seven-and-a-half million people who have got health insurance because of what this team has done. I am proud of the woman standing here today,” the President said. After the event, some television commentators opined that the President’s extended, fulsome comments may have been aimed at underscoring the White House’s assertion that Sebelius chose to leave her position voluntarily, and was not pushed out.

Following the President’s comments, Sebelius spoke for a few minutes, saying, “I want to thank you, Mr. President and Mr. Vice-President, for giving me the opportunity of a lifetime. The President has already made this case, but I want to remake it. HHS is an amazing department. It’s full of bright and talented and hardworking people who believe strongly in our mission, providing healthcare to all Americans. She cited a quotation from former Vice President Hubert Humphrey, whose name was given to the HHS headquarters building. “What Hubert Humphrey said,” Sebelius noted, “is that the moral test of government is how government treats people who are in the dawn of life, the sunset of life, and the shadow of life”; and she cited gains being made in caring for the health of children, seniors, and the poor, under her administration at HHS. Moreover, she said, referring to the implementation of the ACA, “We are on the front lines of a long-overdue national change, fixing a broken health system. Now, this is the most meaningful work I’ve ever been a part of; in fact, it’s been the cause of my life.”

Then, after Sebelius had made her comments, President Obama turned to Sylvia Mathews Burwell and said, “Now we know there’s still more work to do at HHS, more work to do to implement the Affordable Care Act, there’s another enrollment period coming in about six months or so,” and there are numerous other key sets of tasks to accomplish. “And I could choose no manager as experienced, as competent, as my current Director of OMB, Sylvia Mathews Burwell…  Here, as my budget director at the White House,” he continued, “she’s already delivered results. The deficit has plunged by more than $400 billion. When the government was forced to shut down last October and even as most of her own team was barred from reporting to work, Sylvia was a rock, a steady hand” in keeping essential functions of OMB running. “Once the government was reopened, Sylvia was vital to putting an end to these manufactured crises around raising the debt ceiling,” among numerous other accomplishments.

“Sylvia is a proven manager, and she knows how to deliver results,” President Obama said. “And she’ll need to be a proven manager, because these are tough tasks, big challenges” ahead for HHS… All of us rely on the dedicated servants, scientists, researchers, at HHS and the FDA and CDC, and NIH; all of them are an extraordinary team, and sometimes the American people take for granted the incredible network of outstanding public servants that we have” in the department, the President said, adding that he wanted those public servants recognized. “We’ll miss seeing you around the White House,” he said, turning to Mathews Burwell. “But I know that you’re going to do an outstanding job as Secretary of HHS, I hope the Senate confirms you without delay. Last time, she was confirmed unanimously by the Senate,” he noted pointedly, before he handed the podium over to Mathews Burwell. Mathews Burwell spoke for barely one minute. She said, “I’m humbled, honored, and excited to build on the achievements that Kathleen, the President, and so many others have put into place,” and she thanked the President, before Obama, Sebelius, Mathews Burwell, and Vice President Biden reentered the White House.

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