Tom Daschle, left, isn't the first of President Barack Obama's Cabinet appointees to face some tough questions, but he will face the toughest yet in the Senate Finance Committee as the president's nominee for secretary of Health and Human Services. (AP photo by Charles Dharapak)
by Noam N. Levey
Tom Daschle, once considered assured of breezing through his confirmation as secretary of Health and Human Services, soon will face tough questioning on Capitol Hill about underpaying his income taxes and his extensive work for clients in the healthcare industry, Republican aides said Saturday.
GOP lawmakers on the Senate Finance Committee are preparing to grill the former Senate majority leader about his failure to pay more than $128,000 in taxes for 2005, 2006 and 2007.
And Republicans are interested in hundreds of thousands of dollars Daschle earned for consulting work and speaking engagements with healthcare companies and groups in the years after his 2005 departure from the Senate.
Though not a registered lobbyist, the South Dakota Democrat over the last two years earned more than $2.1 million as a "special policy advisor" at Alston & Bird, a law firm with more than 50 lobbying clients in the healthcare industry.
According to financial disclosure forms filed with the Office of Government Ethics, Daschle also took in $153,200 in 2008 for giving speeches to healthcare companies and industry groups such as GE Healthcare, a leading manufacturer of medical devices.
A decade ago, Daschle's wife did some work for the healthcare industry as well. In 1999 and 2000, Linda Daschle was among a group of lobbyists at Baker Donelson Bearman & Caldwell who represented the drug maker Schering-Plough Corp., which paid the law firm $470,000 over the two years, according to federal lobbying reports.
Tom Daschle has indicated he plans to resign from Alston & Bird if he is confirmed. He already stepped down from more than a dozen boards, including that of the Mayo Clinic, another influential voice in the healthcare debate.
Last month, the Office of Government Ethics concluded that Daschle "is in compliance with applicable laws and regulations governing conflicts of interest."
And a Daschle spokeswoman said Saturday that the former senator was looking forward to his hearing before the Senate Finance Committee, likely to be in the next several weeks. "He is happy to answer any more questions that members have," Jenny Backus said.
See the rest of the report on Daschle's grilling in the Senate Finance Committee in Tribune newspapers and here in the Swamp:
GOP lawmakers -- many of whom cheered Daschle's selection to head President Obama's healthcare reform effort -- have been relatively quiet since news of his tax problems leaked Friday.
With only 41 votes in the Senate, Republicans have little leverage to stop Daschle's nomination.
Meanwhile, senior Democrats rallied to Daschle's side Saturday. Obama's press secretary has said the president remains steadfastly behind Daschle.
But Daschle's unpaid taxes -- which came to light just 2 1/2 weeks after Obama's nominee for Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, had to admit he had failed to pay enough income taxes -- have held up his confirmation at a time when the Obama administration is trying to push ahead with a major healthcare reform campaign.
"There is a lot of concern on the committee," said one GOP staffer who was not authorized to speak on the record about the issue.
After his nomination, Daschle paid $140,167 in back taxes and interest stemming primarily from his consulting work for a New York private equity fund owned by longtime Democratic donor Leo J. Hindery Jr.
InterMedia Advisors paid Daschle $1 million a year. And Hindery, a Daschle friend who has given hundreds of thousands of dollars to Democratic campaigns in recent years, provided Daschle with a car and driver.
But for three years Daschle did not report the car on his tax returns. He also neglected to report one month's income because of what InterMedia said was a clerical error.
And he improperly deducted donations he and his wife made to charities that were not tax-exempt.
In addition to asking about the taxes, Republican lawmakers plan to ask Daschle about his work at Alston & Bird, whose clients have included pharmaceuticals such as Abbott Laboratories, hospital groups such as HealthSouth Corp. and pharmacies such as CVS Caremark Corp.
Daschle personally represented Minneapolis-based UnitedHealth Group, one of the country's largest health insurers, Backus said.
In September, Daschle also earned $20,000 for speaking to America's Health Insurance Plans, the industry's lobbying arm in Washington.
Others who paid to hear from Daschle last year include Premier Inc., the Moses Cone Health System, the National Assn. of Boards of Pharmacy, CSL Behring, Misys Healthcare Systems, Prime Therapeutics and Ingalls Health System.
The insurance industry, which helped derail healthcare reform efforts under President Clinton, is expected to play a key role as the Obama administration launches a new campaign.
In his 2008 book -- "Critical: What We Can Do About the Health-Care Crisis" -- Daschle singled out insurance and pharmaceutical companies as potential obstacles to a major reform campaign.
Backus said Saturday that Daschle, who in recent years has become a leading advocate for overhauling the nation's healthcare system, eagerly accepted invitations to speak to groups like the insurers.
"Any time people wanted to hear from him, he welcomed it," she said.
Tom Hamburger in our Washington bureau contributed to this report.









Comments
Good! Grill him until you're satisfied his ethics and his experience make him right for the job, or until you disqualify him. If I were interviewing for any job anywhere, I'd expect no less.
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As long as they start off their jobs with their income taxes paid up and current, I can live with these guys having made mistakes in that arena in the past, but it does seem disconcerting that we now have TWO appointees having to audit and re-audit tax issues. "Change" ought to include people in the White House who are breaking no laws, including tax laws. It's one of those things I'd have hooted over if Daschle were a Republican in the Bush administration; I can't imagine just glossing over it just because the parties have changed.
Posted by: Op109 | February 1, 2009 9:09 AM
no way, another crook in Obama's camp?
a chump administration rises again.
good luck with that.
Posted by: m | February 1, 2009 11:45 AM
"change yes we can!"...... NO THEY CAN'T and THEY WONT!.
Can it be any more blatant? Tax cheats for secretary of treasury and health/medical services. Lobbyists in his cabinet.(after the show Prez Obama put on stating no lobbyists) And who knows who and what else.
Even more worrisome is that Daschle earned millions as a 'non-lobbyist' for the health industry. How can any thinking American believe Daschle will put the interests of the American people ahead of his corporate clients?
On to the Stimulus Bill... OMG!#? - Well I digress! topic for another blog
Posted by: marius | February 1, 2009 12:53 PM
When Obama said no lobbyists in his Administration did he mean only those who failed to properly register and those whose lobbying work he waived? Is he writing the new ethics rules in invisible ink?
Posted by: clarice feldman | February 1, 2009 1:11 PM
What a joke! Another disqualified candidate. What is the President thinking? Is it more important to think that what we do is more important than who we are. This president is so far batting a negative 1000. The President is leaving a legacy fof bad judment in his first month!
Posted by: Thomas | February 1, 2009 1:29 PM
While I believe him to be an honest servant, go ahead and grill him. The rants from the right don't really sway me....that's just how the "minority" party acts.
Posted by: bill r. | February 1, 2009 3:09 PM
Unfortunately many of our most qualified public servants have dirt under their fingernails. Fortunately, the People are paying attention now and that in itself will have a cleansing effect.
Posted by: Hilary Smith | February 1, 2009 3:25 PM
ASK DEAN OR KUCINICH TO SERVE --OR FOR ADVICE-- or are they 'tpp disagreeable"?
got this from the nayion blog
Perhaps you forgot to mention that Daschle's wife is a prominent lobbyist?
Or that Carol Browner's husband, the new Energy Czar, is a lobbyist for energy companies.
WASHINGTON -- Linda Hall Daschle is one of the most important aviation lobbyists in town. Ms. Daschle is also the wife of Tom Daschle, whom President-elect Barack Obama has chosen to be the next secretary of health and human services.
Tom Downey is the founder and chairman of a lobbying firm with dozens of clients, including several with interests in energy policy. Mr. Downey is also the husband of Carol M. Browner, Mr. Obama's likely choice to be the next White House energy czar.
Ms. Daschle has been a lobbyist since 1997. Some early clients had an interest in health policy, like the drug maker Amgen and the tobacco giant Philip Morris. In recent years she has mainly represented aviation companies like Lockheed Martin Ms. Browner, a former administrator for the Environmental Protection Agency, is a principal at the Albright Group, an international consulting firm. She married Mr. Downey in 2007.
He had been a Democratic congressman from Long Island from 1975 to 1993, but lost his seat after it was revealed that he was among several lawmakers who had frequently overdrawn their House bank accounts without penalty, and that his wife at the time was a House bank auditor.
Mr. Downey later founded a lobbying firm whose past clients included energy companies like Chevron and the Standard Renewable Energy Group, several foreign countries, and the Albright Group. In 2006 the couple worked together on issues related to a Dubai firm's purchase of a United States port operator.
http://tinyurl.com/6dr3lp
This is how you run a "lobbyist free" administration
Posted by: no2daschle andbrowner | February 2, 2009 6:14 AM
here we go tom daschle anothet crook in the useless goverment, i have had it with this goverment, put them all in jail
Posted by: jack rodgers | February 2, 2009 7:47 AM
Be careful what you wish for! This is surely not the "change" America wanted. More of the same... lobbyists, tax-cheats, and partisan politics... Actually quite sad... People voted with their hearts for reform.... if they had voted with their brains, they would have realized that it was just all smoke and mirrors. I wish Mr. Daschelle the best, since he will be approved by the "good old boys (and girls) club" to reign over the citizens who deserve what they get.
Posted by: Bob | February 2, 2009 7:53 AM