Obama's
Ebola czar Klain to exit White House by March 1
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[December 09, 2014]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Ebola
coordinator Ron Klain plans to return to his private sector job at the
end of February, capping speculation that the seasoned political aide
would play a broader White House role for the rest of President Barack
Obama's tenure.
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White House spokesman Josh Earnest said on Monday Klain was hired
as a "special government employee," a classification that brings
consultants on board for a maximum term of 130 days.
Klain's first day was Oct. 22, meaning his term will expire by March
1. A lawyer who previously served as chief of staff to vice
presidents Joe Biden and Al Gore, Klain plans to return to his job
at Revolution LLC, a venture capital firm owned by AOL co-founder
Steve Case.
The White House will evaluate whether it needs to replace Klain when
he leaves, Earnest said.
The White House was criticized for scrambling after a Liberian man
died of Ebola in a Dallas hospital. Two nurses there had contracted
the disease, and officials had to trace hundreds of people who had
crossed their paths.
Klain, lauded by Democrats for his ability to coordinate complex
projects, was brought in as Ebola "czar" as the White House sought
to show it was on top of the crisis. His lack of medical expertise
made him a controversial pick.
At the time, the White House said the job would be temporary. Klain
told MSNBC in a November interview that he would be returning to
private life.
He was cited as a potential replacement for chief of staff Denis
McDonough, should there have been a staff shake-up after November
elections. But there is no indication that McDonough plans to leave
soon.
Klain has worked mainly behind the scenes, stepping out to eulogize
a U.S. surgeon who died in November from Ebola after working in his
native Sierra Leone. The United States hasn't had a known case of
the disease since then.
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Under Klain's leadership, the government tightened screening
procedures and pushed back against calls for travel bans. It also
expanded the number of U.S. hospitals able to treat Ebola patients
to 35 from three.
Obama has stressed that Congress needs to approve $6.18 billion in
emergency funding to help fight the outbreak in West Africa, the
worst ever recorded with 17,111 confirmed, suspected or probable
cases, according to the World Health Organization.
The fate of that request will become clear this week as Congress
rushes to meet a Dec. 11 deadline for funding the government.
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton; Editing by Alan Crosby)
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