Category: Katerina Voutsina
For Himes, a Trip on Air Force One was Something to Tweet About
AIR FORCE ONE
Norwalk Hour
Katerina Voutsina
Boston University Washington News Service
09/17/2009
WASHINGTON—It is almost 4:15 on Monday afternoon. Air Force One has just landed on the tarmac at Andrews Air Force Base in nearby Maryland. President Barack Obama exits the plane first and gets onto Marine One, the presidential helicopter, to be taken back to the White House.
Connecticut Rep. Jim Himes deplanes next and climbs into a staff member’s Jeep Cherokee.
“I was the first time I have ever flown with Air Force One,” Himes said in a telephone interview. “It is a beautiful plane. Any time you are in the presence of an American president it is an awesome feeling. Even if he is still a young guy it is pretty impressive to be around him.”
Reps. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., and Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the House Financial Services Committee also flew back on Air Force One. They were in New York City for the president’s economic address on Wall Street, which came on the one-year anniversary of the collapse of Lehman Brothers.
Himes, a member of the Financial Services Committee and a former Goldman Sachs investment banker, said he thinks he got the invitation because he has been actively involved in the committee.
“It was a very good afternoon,” Himes said. “I had the chance to chat with the president a little bit about health care reform and a little bit about financial regulatory reform. That was a very useful moment.” He said he encouraged Obama to remember how important it is that significant cost savings be found in the health system.
On their way back, President Obama and the congressmen had gyros – Greek lamb kabobs in pita bread – for lunch, according to Himes’ press secretary.
Himes sent a Tweet later: “President was kind enough to offer me a lift to DC on his plane. POTUS travels well. Wondering if rude to swipe the AF1 M&Ms.”
According to the staff member who picked Himes up at Andrews Air Force Base, the preparations were many and complicated. “I had to send my Social Security number, date of birth and model of my car to a White House liaison in the Office of Legislative Affairs. The White House liaison relayed that information to Andrews, so they knew I would be coming,” she said.
The staff member said as they were leaving the base, they noticed Air Force Two was on the tarmac near Air Force One.
“We weren’t sure why it was there at the time, but later found out that Vice President Biden was leaving from Andrews for a trip to Iraq shortly after the President arrived from New York,” she said.
“They were readying Air Force Two for his departure,” she said. “Both planes together was quite the sight.”
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Connecticut Delegates Express Support for Health Care Reform
Conn. Reaction
Norwalk Hour
Katerina Voutsina
Boston University Washington News Service
09/10/2009
WASHINGTON –The Connecticut congressional delegation on Thursday praised President Barack Obama’s speech to a joint session of Congress and echoed his call for bipartisan cooperation on a health care overhaul.
“President Obama made a tremendous case for action on health care reform,” Democratic Sen. Christopher J. Dodd said in a statement Thursday.
Dodd, who shepherded one version of a health care bill through the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee during the long illness of the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, also underlined Obama’s expression of urgency and his call for a bipartisan consensus on the issue.
“We have come too far to turn back now,” Dodd said. “And I believe that this Congress will leave behind the cheap politics of a hot summer and get back to doing the job we were sent here to do,” he said.
Independent Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman said in a separate statement Thursday that he was pleased with Obama’s speech.
“The President gave a clear indication that he wanted to work together in a bipartisan way to pass legislation that will reform our health care insurance system while restraining costs,” he said. “I look forward to working with the President and my colleagues to adopt significant reforms this year.”
Freshman Rep. Jim Himes, D-4th, in a telephone interview Thursday, said Obama’s speech was “very helpful.” The president “traced successfully the outlines of his plan,” Himes said.
Himes, who held seven town-hall meetings on health care since April, spoke of what he described as the urgency of change in the insurance industry. “I heard all kinds of opinions” at those meetings, he said, saying that the growing anxiety and fears about a health care overhaul was an outcome of “the misinformation that the president addressed forcefully last night.”
He said the “you lie” outburst by Republican Rep. Joe Wilson of South Carolina was evidence that “the debate turns ugly and people say things which are damaging the basic respect and commonality that we share as Americans. Joe Wilson went way over that line yesterday.”
Dodd, in his statement, said the President understands that health care reform isn’t about him, or about anyone in Congress who already has good health care insurance.
“It’s about making health care more affordable for families, businesses and the federal government,” Dodd said. “It’s about creating an America where people don’t go broke because they get sick, where people don’t die because they can’t get the treatment they need.”
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