Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

How The Obama Sisters Have Transformed Since Leaving The White House – Women.com

It's normal for siblings to drift apart a little after leaving the parental home, but that wasn't the case for Malia Obama and Sasha Obama. In fact, even though they attended college in different states, the sisters found themselves back together in California.

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Following a few years of studying atUniversity of Michigan,Sasha ended up transferring to the University of Southern California to complete her final college year, putting her closer to her sister, who moved to LA after graduating from Harvard in 2021. In fact, they were roommates.

Michelle Obama told People in 2022 the two had moved in together, revealing her reaction was, "Okay, well that's interesting that you guys are going to try living together. We'll see how it goes." But, jokes aside, Michelle admitted that she was happy to see her children getting along so well. She told Peoplethat same month that she'd been over to see her girls' place, which she described as a pleasant visit that included sipping on martinis. "To see them in that place where they're one another's support systems and they've got each other's backs, is just it's the thing that a mother would want," the former First Lady gushed.

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How The Obama Sisters Have Transformed Since Leaving The White House - Women.com

Nielsen’s Input on ACA Recognized in Obama Presidency Oral History – Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical … – Jacobs School of Medicine and…

Growing up in Elkins, West Virginia, (current population 6,800), Nancy H. Nielsen, MD 76, PhD, could not have fathomed that she would one day not only meet the president of the United States, but work with his administration to completely transform health care in America.

Now her work and that of many others on the Affordable Care Act, from advocacy to implementation, has been documented for posterity in the Obama Presidency Oral History.

Nielsen, senior associate dean for health policy in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, is one of the extraordinary people from all walks of life invited to participate in the Obama Presidency Oral History project. Compiled by Columbia University, the history is based on more than 1,000 hours of interviews with hundreds of people.

Just being invited to do the interview was an incredible honor, Nielsen says. It also gave her a chance to review how she came to take part in one of the most significant health care reforms the U.S. has ever seen.

In 1973, with a doctoral degree in microbiology and a faculty position at the Jacobs School, Nielsen was accepted to the UB medical school. She was a nontraditional student, since she already had a faculty position and was also raising five small children. She was one of just 30 women in her class of 135.

After graduating and serving as the first woman chief resident in internal medicine at Buffalo General, Nielsen was board-certified as an internist. In addition to running a busy private practice, she was drawn to the policy side of medicine. She served as president of the Erie County Medical Society, became involved with the state medical society and started working at the national level.

She served four consecutive terms as speaker of the American Medical Association House of Delegates and in 2008 was elected AMA president, a term that coincided with the intensifying national health care debate.

While Nielsen was president-elect, the AMA launched its Voice for the Uninsured campaign, advocating for health care reforms that would extend health insurance coverage to Americans who didnt have it.

In preparing for the campaign, the AMA media relations staff asked if Nielsen had any patients who were uninsured.

Nancy H. Nielsen, MD 76, PhD, with her extended family after receiving the Jacobs Schools Distinguished Alumni Award in the fall 2023.

Thats when Nielsen revealed she had also been uninsured. During graduate school, I delivered two babies when I was uninsured, she says, and that became the cause of my life: to make sure all Americans got health insurance.

She recalls that at the time the Affordable Care Act was passed, 19% of the U.S. population had no health insurance.

It really was a national scandal, to tell you the truth, and there were places where it was even worse than that, she says. There is nothing good about being uninsured. That was the whole point of the Voice for the Uninsured. They didnt have a voice. So we became that voice.

Once implemented, the Affordable Care Act cut the uninsured rate in the U.S. to 9% from 19%. It would have cut it even more, Nielsen explains, but the Supreme Court intervened and said the expansion of Medicaid, which was supposed to insure millions, was a states rights issue.

Since then, more states have come on board. Nielsen says its now down to about 10 states that havent expanded Medicaid, about half of which are considering it or are about to expand.

Nielsen, then president of the American Medical Association, welcomed President Barack Obama to the AMA House of Delegates annual meeting in Chicago on June 15, 2009. Photo courtesy of the American Medical Association

A few months after Nielsen finished her term as immediate past president of the AMA, she got a call from the White House. She was asked to come work at the newly established Center for Innovation in the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services in the Department of Health and Human Services.

It was a brand-new part of HHS, and they said they needed me to come to bring the physician voice, as they were implementing this new part of the government, Nielsen says.

As senior adviser for stakeholder engagement, she would be on loan from UB to the federal government, a stint that would last two years. Her role was to interact with, and share the concerns of, clinicians throughout the health care system.

The Innovation Center is unique in government, Nielsen notes. It was enshrined in the ACA law, so that instead of making a big policy change and then having unintended consequences, the Innovation Center would do pilots and actually evaluate whether the care was improved and whether there were savings. That was the purpose. There was no place else in government where there was the flexibility to try something to see if it worked.

She assumed additional responsibilities working with HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, advising on policy and sometimes attending events when the secretary could not.

It was just an extraordinarily exciting time and I loved it, Nielsen remembers.

She admits that working in Washington was seductive, but she always intended to return to UB.

I owe my career to UB, she says simply. I always wanted to be a physician. I didnt have money. After my fifth child was born, I finally applied. I was 29 when I started medical school and my fifth child was 2 months old.

So UB gave me a chance. I was lucky that the admissions committee let me in, and I will never forget it. My whole career has been here and Ive just been very fortunate. I owe it all to UB.

Now shes passing her passion for policy on to the next generation of physicians. Nielsen was recently asked to be faculty adviser to a group of Jacobs School students who want to develop a policy elective.

Why is policy important? she asks. Policy is the road map that we use to get to the society we want. For me, it meant getting affordable health insurance for every American. I tell the students, Your cause will be different. My role here is to help the students change the world, whatever that means to them.

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Is this the year that no one watches political spots? – Roll Call

Little more than a decade ago, campaign finance reform was one of the hottest issues animating Democrats. Now it seems as irrelevant as a national drive to make Esperanto Americas second language.

Barack Obama, in his 2010 State of the Union address, predicted that the Supreme Courts Citizens United decision will open the floodgates for special interests. The TV cameras caught Supreme Court Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. angrily shaking his head as he mouthed, Not true.

Obama was, of course, right.

Super PACs, created in the wake of Citizens United, are fast dominating politics. The arithmetic is irresistible: Candidates can urge the super wealthy to donate $3,300 (the legal maximum) to their general election campaigns or they can encourage them to make a seven-figure donation to a friendly super PAC.

As late as 2016, Hillary Clinton gave lip service to the cause in her convention acceptance speech: We need to appoint Supreme Court justices who will get money out of politics and well pass a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United.

But that was about the time when the Democrats discovered they could more than match the Republicans in super PAC largesse. And suddenly the issue faded like an Obama bumper sticker.

For a while, Democrats were apologetic as they explained that they couldnt practice unilateral disarmament in the battle against the Republicans. Then, faced with the never-ending threat from Donald Trump, Democrats unapologetically adopted the GOPs philosophy that anything goes in politics.

Roughly $8 billion was spent in 2020 on campaigns for federal office. And, with another bitterly fought presidential race and close battles for Congress, that number is likely to rise this year as fast as college tuition.

Early this month, Politico estimated that super PAC spending on federal races had more than doubled compared with the numbers from a similar period in 2020.

As super PACs play a larger role in politics, congressional candidates in both parties are fast losing control of their own campaigns. While the rules barring coordination between a super PAC and a candidate are increasingly porous, there can be sharp differences over what is the best political message.

An illustrative example is the collapse of Never Back Down, the super PAC that spent a jaw-dropping $158 million in 2023 supposedly boosting Ron DeSantis presidential campaign. Instead of powering the Florida governor to victory, the super PAC imploded with staff resignations and acrimony with the official DeSantis campaign before the Iowa caucuses.

Part of the problem is that there is so much money sloshing around politics in 2024 that greed becomes entwined with electoral strategies. All it takes is one smooth-talking political consultant and one gullible billionaire and, voil, you have a new super PAC.

The result is that many TV ads from super PACs and cause groups are designed to appeal to one key constituency: politically naive donors. The spots may be off message for the candidate they are promoting, but they attract money to fund new ads and, of course, lucrative fees for the consultant.

This may also be the year when the TV ad (a staple of politics since I Like Ike cartoons in 1952) may finally lose its luster.

Three trends are colliding: The 2024 presidential race promises to be the most expensive in history. The campaign is expected to pivot around just six or seven swing states (Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Nevada, Arizona, Georgia and maybe North Carolina). And, thirdly, because of cord-cutting, 50 percent of households barely see any TV ads at all.

Pity the more than 30 million voters in those seven battleground states. Not only will they be thumped with nonstop political commercials, but their phones will also constantly beep with text messages from candidates. And these swing-state voters will only venture onto social media at their own peril.

Probably, at this very moment, both presidential campaigns are working on ways that a hologram of President Joe Biden or Trump can greet swing voters at their breakfast table each morning.

Amid the torrent of ads in every place except inside bottles of laundry detergent, congressional candidates will face a daunting challenge on how to break through the clutter.

Four Senate races and 14 up-for-grabs House seats are in those seven swing states. Throw in two other hotly contested House races in Nebraska and Maine, where electoral votes are awarded by congressional district.

When voters are savvy enough to recognize a negative TV spot as soon as they glimpse the first grainy photograph or hear the initial words of voice-of-doom narration, how can a House candidate, without an unlimited budget, ever communicate? And even Senate candidates will play second fiddle to the high-intensity presidential race.

Maybe the result in these swing states will be even more party-line voting than ever before. When the congressional and Senate races become a blur, regardless of the merits of individual candidates, it will be hard to motivate voters to split their tickets.

Obviously, there is no current constituency in Congress pressing to write legislation to regulate the cacophony of political ads. But at some point, maybe, legislators in both parties will come to the conclusion that the only people benefiting from the current system are (surprise) political consultants.

Granted, it is hard to shake the inbred belief in politics that a few million dollars more or one killer TV ad will make all the difference. But the sad truth is that in this politically saturated year, almost nobody is listening.

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Is this the year that no one watches political spots? - Roll Call

Nielsen’s contributions to the Affordable Care Act are recognized, documented in the Obama Presidency Oral History – University at Buffalo

Image courtesy of the American Medical Association

BUFFALO, N.Y. Growing up in Elkins, West Virginia, (current population 6,800), Nancy H. Nielsen, MD, PhD, could not have fathomed that she would one day not only meet the president of the United States but work with his administration to completely transform health care in America.

Now her work and that of many others on the Affordable Care Act, from advocacy to implementation, has been documented for posterity in the Obama Presidency Oral History.

Nielsen, senior associate dean for health policy in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at the University at Buffalo, is one of the extraordinary people from all walks of life invited to participate in the Obama Presidency Oral History project. Compiled by Columbia University, the history is based on more than a thousand hours of interviews with hundreds of people.

Just being invited to do the interview was an incredible honor, Nielsen said. It also gave her a chance to review how she came to take part in one of the most significant health care reforms the U.S. has ever seen. She recounts some of the highlights in this video.

Nontraditional MD student

In 1973, with a PhD in microbiology and a faculty position at the Jacobs School, Nielsen was accepted to the UB medical school. She was a nontraditional student, since she already had a faculty position and was also raising five small children. She was one of just 30 women in her class of 135.

After graduating and serving as the first woman chief resident in internal medicine at Buffalo General, Nielsen was board-certified as an internist. In addition to running a busy private practice, she was drawn to the policy side of medicine. She served as president of the Erie County Medical Society, became involved with the state medical society and started working at the national level.

She served four consecutive terms as speaker of the American Medical Association House of Delegates and in 2008 was elected AMA president, a term that coincided with the intensifying national health care debate.

While Nielsen was president-elect, the AMA launched its Voice for the Uninsured campaign, advocating for health care reforms that would extend health insurance coverage to Americans who didnt have it.

In preparing for the campaign, the AMA media relations staff asked if Nielsen had any patients who were uninsured.

The cause of my life

Thats when Nielsen revealed that she had also been uninsured. During graduate school, I delivered two babies when I was uninsured, she said, and that became the cause of my life: to make sure all Americans got health insurance.

She recalled that at the time the Affordable Care Act was passed, 19% of the U.S. population had no health insurance.

It really was a national scandal, to tell you the truth, and there were places where it was even worse than that, she said. There is nothing good about being uninsured. That was the whole point of the Voice for the Uninsured. They didnt have a voice. So we became that voice.

Once implemented, the Affordable Care Act cut the uninsured rate in the U.S. from 19% to 9%. It would have cut it even more, Nielsen explained, but the Supreme Court intervened and said the expansion of Medicaid, which was supposed to insure millions, was a states rights issue.

Since then, more states have come on board. Nielsen said its now down to about 10 states that havent expanded Medicaid, about half of which are considering it or are about to expand.

A call from the White House

A few months after Nielsen finished her term as immediate past president of the AMA, she got a call from the White House. She was asked to come work at the newly established Center for Innovation in the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services in the Department of Health and Human Services.

It was a brand-new part of HHS, and they said they needed me to come to bring the physician voice, as they were implementing this new part of the government, said Nielsen.

As senior adviser for stakeholder engagement, she would be on loan from UB to the federal government, a stint that would last two years. Her role was to interact with, and share the concerns of, clinicians throughout the health care system.

The Innovation Center is unique in government, explained Nielsen. It was enshrined in the ACA law so that instead of making a big policy change and then having unintended consequences, the Innovation Center would do pilots and actually evaluate whether the care was improved and whether there were savings. That was the purpose. There was no place else in government where there was the flexibility to try something to see if it worked.

She assumed additional responsibilities working with HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, advising on policy and sometimes attending events when the secretary could not.

It was just an extraordinarily exciting time and I loved it, recalled Nielsen.

She admitted that working in Washington was seductive, but she always intended to return to UB.

I owe my career to UB, she said simply. I always wanted to be a physician. I didnt have money. After my fifth child was born, I finally applied. I was 29 when I started medical school and my fifth child was 2 months old.

UB gave me a chance

So UB gave me a chance. I was lucky that the admissions committee let me in, and I will never forget it. My whole career has been here and Ive just been very fortunate. I owe it all to UB.

Now shes passing her passion for policy to the next generation of physicians. Nielsen was recently asked to be faculty adviser to a group of Jacobs School students who want to develop a policy elective.

Why is policy important? she asked. Policy is the road map that we use to get to the society we want. For me, it meant getting affordable health insurance for every American. I tell the students, Your cause will be different. My role here is to help the students change the world, whatever that means to them.

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Nielsen's contributions to the Affordable Care Act are recognized, documented in the Obama Presidency Oral History - University at Buffalo

Michelle Obama Surprises D.C. High Schoolers to Celebrate Their College Decisions: ‘We Need Your Perspectives’ – PEOPLE

Michelle Obama is celebrating the future generation of scholars!

The former first lady, 60, surprised thousands of high school students on Tuesday, April 30, when she popped by a 2024 College Signing Day event held in Washington, D.C.

The special event partnered with Obama's Reach Higher initiative launched 10 years ago while she was first lady which encourages young people to continue their education beyond high school.

"I remember when I was in your shoes, and no matter how hard I worked to prepare, I had this little voice in the back of my head telling me that maybe, just maybe, I didn't belong," Obama told the crowd. "I know that it is easy to write yourself off even before your journey begins, and that's exactly why I wanted to come and talk to you all today."

Alexander Vassiliadis Photography

Obama shared some lessons she learned when she was a first-generation college student, and cheered the high schoolers along for bravely entering their chapter.

"We need your perspectives to help us continue to build a more just and equal nation, and world, at this point," she said.

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The College Signing Day event was hosted by the DC College Access Program (DC-CAP) at the Capitol One Arena and saw about 2,500 students celebrating together.

During her unannounced speech, Obama praised the students for pushing through school with "grit and determination and optimism" during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, and also encouraged the high school seniors to vote up and down the ballot in the upcoming election.

She also urged students to fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) form and take advantage of any financial aid they can as they begin the next step of their education. Theres still time, she said. I know its been a complicated year, but the FAFSA is your best shot at getting the money you're going to need to pay for school. And I cannot stress this enough."

Alexander Vassiliadis Photography

The former first lady has been involved in celebrating and surprising! students on several occasions over the years.

Back in October 2019, Obama showed up at Randle Highlands Elementary School in Washington, D.C. with The Ellen Degeneres Show, after the school was left in need of supplies and serious renovation.

As were standing there, in walks Michelle Obama, the school's principal, Kristie Edwards, told PEOPLE at the time. A student yelled Obama! Im still looking at a computer, and I look up and its really her. We were frozen. We literally could not move. I finally started moving toward her to give her a hug. She tells us that Ellen heard that we need some things for our school, and she presents us with a box.

Obama gifted with The Ellen Degeneres Show a new basketball court and computer room for the school, along with iPads for all the teachers and students.

In November 2021, Obama met with students Jada Yelverton-Grave, Dreshta Boghra and Caitlin James, at the unveiling of Saks Fifth Avenues holiday windows, after being admired by their advocacy and empowerment work with Girls Inc., a girls leadership organization program.

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Michelle Obama Surprises D.C. High Schoolers to Celebrate Their College Decisions: 'We Need Your Perspectives' - PEOPLE