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Position: Secretary - Health and Human Services

The Department of Health and Human Services is the principal agency for protecting the health of all Americans and providing essential human services, especially for those who are least able to help themselves. The department includes more than 300 programs, particularly in the areas of: medical and social science research, preventing outbreak of infectious disease, including immunization services, assuring food and drug safety, Medicare and Medicaid, financial assistance and services for low-income families, improving maternal and infant health, Head Start, preventing child abuse and domestic violence, substance abuse treatment and prevention, services for older Americans, including home-delivered meals, comprehensive health services for Native Americans. HHS is the largest grant-making agency in the federal government, providing some 60,000 grants per year. Its Medicare program is the nation's largest health insurer, handling more than 900 million claims per year.

Type of Appointment/Position: Presidential with Senate confirmation    


Angela Glover Blackwell Rate this Nominee   Current Rating: click to rate

Nominee's Background:

Angela Glover Blackwell is founder and chief executive officer of PolicyLink, a national research and action institute advancing economic and social equity. By Lifting Up What Works® using research to understand and demonstrate the possibilities for positive change PolicyLink presents new and innovative solutions to old problems.

Since its inception in January 1999, PolicyLink has partnered with a cross-section of stakeholders to ensure that questions of equity receive the highest priority in addressing major policy issues, including: urban sprawl and smart growth, reinvestment in low-income communities, bridging the digital divide, eliminating racial health disparities, and developing leaders for policy change. PolicyLink is a leading advocate for equitable development, a comprehensive approach which includes the fair distribution of affordable housing throughout regions and equitable public investment. PolicyLink is also working to promote equitable rebuilding in Louisiana, and bring the voices of local and displaced residents into the post-Hurricane Katrina reconstruction planning process.

Blackwell is a national authority on poverty issues, recently contributing a chapter to Ending Poverty in America: How to Restore the American Dream (The New Press, 2007), an anthology edited by former Sen. John Edwards. She also collaborated with Tavis Smiley to develop The Covenant with Black America'a New York Times best-selling book of community and policy strategies for economic and social empowerment, and the follow-up, Covenant in Action. Along with Manuel Pastor and Stewart Kwoh, she co-authored Searching for the Uncommon Common Ground: New Dimensions on Race in America (W.W. Norton, 2002), a book that demonstrates the existence of continuing racial inequity and explores new policy framings to address the challenges that lie ahead. She is also a frequent guest in the media and her appearances include ABC's Nightline, NOW with Bill Moyers, and National Public Radio. She has been published in the opinion pages of The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and the San Francisco Chronicle; and has lectured widely on concentrated poverty and equitable development, appearing before audiences at the Chautauqua Institution, the State of the Black Union, the Global Women's Action Network for Children, and the Aspen Ideas Festival.

Blackwell founded PolicyLink after serving as senior vice president for The Rockefeller Foundation from 1995 to 1998. She directed the Foundation's domestic and cultural divisions and developed the Next Generation Leadership and Building Democracy programs, centered on issues of inclusion, race, and policy. In 1987, she founded the Urban Strategies Council in Oakland, California, and received national recognition for pioneering a community building approach to social change through in-depth understanding of local conditions, community-driven systems reform, and an insistence on accountability. For a decade beginning in 1977, Blackwell served as a partner with Public Advocates, a nationally renowned public interest law firm representing the underrepresented. She successfully litigated class action suits and developed innovative non-litigation strategies in the areas of employment, education, health, and consumer affairs.

Blackwell earned a bachelor's degree from Howard University, and a law degree from the University of California at Berkeley. She co-chairs a Center for American Progress task force on poverty, called Hope, Opportunity, and Mobility for Everyone (HOME): The National Initiative to End Poverty. She currently sits on the boards of the Children's Defense Fund, Advancement Project, Sojourners and the Corporation for Enterprise Development.

Nominating Speech:
Angela Glover Blackwell, founder and CEO of PolicyLink addressed the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions about strategies for moving people out of poverty. If fully implemented, the strategies, developed by the Center for American Progress (CAP) Task Force on Poverty, which she co-chairs, have the potential to cut poverty in half over the next 10 years.

Blackwell's committee testimony was drawn from the task force's 12 recommendations. Download here.


To research this nominee, please look for them on the Wikipedia website or at Google.
Progressive Criteria:
The Health and Human Services Department will:

Fully acknowledge that health coverage is a human right;

Stand for high quality universal health care (including mental health care) for all residents of the US, effective, safe and affordable drugs and strong prevention programs;

Through the FDA, work to make sure that safe and effective drugs are also affordable;

Run a research program that is not shaped by religious doctrines and that is open to public scrutiny;

Support women's right to choose and work to make that right available to all;

Promote publicly-funded drug research based on public health need, not profit;

Promote drug research to benefit all demographic groups and all segments of American society;

Cooperate with international health promotion and assistance.


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