Friday, August 30, 2013

The Obama-Clinton health care bond

Barack Obama (left) and Bill Clinton (right) are shown. | AP Photo

Obama is using Clinton’s political savvy to change the perception of Obamacare. | AP Photo





Bill Clinton will attempt again next week to do for Obamacare what has long eluded its namesake: Cut through the political noise and change the perception of a law much of the public doesn’t like or understand.


His speech at Clinton’s presidential library in Arkansas Wednesday is a continuation of the relationship that benefited the former and current president in the 2012 campaign. It’s a role Clinton has played before on behalf of the Affordable Care Act, which is rooted in the failed effort by he and his wife, Hillary Clinton, to pass comprehensive health care reform two decades ago.







Clinton is giving the speech at the request of the White House, but the choice of venue was his, and one that seemed natural to him, according to his aides.


(PHOTOS: 25 unforgettable Obamacare quotes)


“For a variety of reasons, including having hundreds of millions of dollars in negative ads run against the law, the administration has had a hard time communicating the law’s benefits and knocking down the false attacks,” said Democratic strategist Stephanie Cutter, who was deeply involved in the health reform effort when she was an adviser to President Barack Obama.


“There’s no one better to lay it all out for the American people than President Clinton,” she added. “He’ll cut through the rhetoric and get to the heart of the issue … ‘How does the law impact me and my family, and how much will my health care cost?’ Ultimately, that’s all the American people care about, and President Clinton knows how to put it in their terms.”


The aim of the speech may be broader than a continuation of Clinton’s well-received defense of the law last year at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., where he laid out the intricate legislation in a way people could understand. But the White House clearly framed it that way in a tweet from Obama aide Dan Pfeiffer shortly after it was announced on Wednesday.


(PHOTOS: Bill Clinton’s life and career)


“Excited to have President BillClinton, once dubbed Secretary of Explaining Stuff, talk about the health reform law on 9/4 in Little Rock,” read the tweet.


The venue is Bill Clinton’s home turf — his native Arkansas — and speaking in one of the poorest states in the nation could help him to highlight what the White House sees as the benefits of the bill.


The speech suggests that the relationship between Clinton and the White House will continue as long as there is a need in the final three years of Obama’s presidency — the period, of course, during which Hillary Clinton will decide whether to run again in 2016.


(Also on POLITICO: W.H. gears up for major new Obamacare push)


“He will lay down the facts about what is working and what is to come,” said a White House official of the speech.


“His Sept. 4th speech will be the first of a number of high-profile events and speeches by administration officials and allies throughout the fall aimed at raising awareness about the law. In addition to his remarks in Little Rock, President Clinton is also expected to continue to raise public awareness around the law during the critical months for open enrollment.”


Officials on both sides have tended to downplay the breathlessness with which every Clinton utterance related to Obama gets covered. Clinton’s usefulness goes only so far for Obama, but there is a recognition that he is seen as less polarizing than the president on certain topics.


(Also on POLITICO: TOP 5 complaints about Obamacare)


And Clinton supporters argue that he gives many speeches that are similar to the one he’ll deliver next week, but they don’t all get written about.


Still, health care is an issue that both Clintons care deeply about. And as Clinton attempts to highlight that Republicans have offered no alternative to the bill that the U.S. Supreme Court has upheld, his speech serves as a tacit reminder of how much work he and his wife put into health care early in his presidency.


Clinton has emerged as a big Obamacare booster over the past couple of years, working to calm a Democratic base that’s been either upset the law isn’t liberal enough or anxious about what could be a bumpy beginning.


(Also on POLITICO: Bill Clinton calls for action in March on Washington speech)


The stakes are high: In about a month, millions will be able to start signing up for Obamacare coverage. But new polling shows about 40 percent of the public remains confused about whether Obamacare is still the law — let alone what’s actually in it.




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The Obama-Clinton health care bond

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