Back Into the Fray: Daschle Talks Health Care

Obama's fallen Cabinet pick on what's next for health care reform.

ByABC News via logo
April 23, 2009, 5:40 PM

April 24, 2009— -- He's been a longtime force inside Washington's most influential circles, so perhaps it's no surprise that Tom Daschle says it's an adjustment to be out of the loop.

"It's hard in some ways," the former U.S. senator told ABC News' Tim Johnson today on "Good Morning America," nearly three months after withdrawing from consideration to become President Obama's Secretary of Health and Human Services. "I'm more free now. I'm a little more -- flexible."

Still, in his first television interview since his very public exit from team Obama, Daschle, once Senate majority leader, made clear that he hasn't completely stepped away the workings of Washington, the Obama White House and his former Senate colleagues.

"I'd like to think we're still very close," Daschle said. "We talk with some frequency. They are very involved of course on a day-to-day basis on Capitol Hill and, to a large extent, I am still able to talk to my fellow colleagues as well as with those whom I would have worked with at the department."

Just four months ago, Daschle appeared to be at the top of his game. Obama called him "one of America's foremost health care experts" and "the original no-drama guy" while discussing the future of the health care system in December.

"Tom brings more than just great expertise to this task, he brings the respect he earned during his years of leadership in Congress," Obama said. "He knows how to reach across the aisle and bridge partisan divides. And he has the trust of folks from every angle of this issue: doctors, nurses and patients; unions and businesses; hospitals and advocacy groups -- all of whom will have a seat at the table as we craft our plan."

But controversy quickly followed, with the former South Dakota senator withdrawing his name from consideration in early February after questions surfaced about his taxes. Daschle failed to declare on his income taxes a chauffeur service that he used for years, as tax laws require. Though he corrected the violation during the vetting process, he was unable to overcome the political hurdles that came with the territory.

Still, today Daschle talked politics. He tackled the cost of health care reform for American families, and weighed in on whether that reform can happen soon.