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			 Just three weeks ahead of critical midterm elections, Obama is 
			facing increased pressure from Republican critics. They say he has 
			been too slow to protect Americans, drawing parallels to what they 
			have described as foot-dragging on dealing with the threat from 
			Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria. 
 Democrats who are at risk of losing control of the Senate in the 
			November elections are worried that public concerns over Obama's 
			management of Ebola could hurt them, too.
 
 Obama's job approval ratings are at 39 percent, according to 
			Reuters-Ipsos polls in the first week of October.
 
 "At a time in which his job approval rating is quite low and his 
			party is suffering because of it, I think that this is just one more 
			cut in what's turned out to be the death by a thousand cuts for 
			President Obama," said Ross Baker, a political scientists at 
			Rutgers.
 
 Republican lawmakers, including U.S. House Speaker John Boehner, 
			turned up the pressure on Wednesday with calls for travel bans for 
			the three African nations afflicted by the Ebola outbreak.
 
 
			 
			Polls show that move would be popular with Americans. The White 
			House has ruled out a ban, saying it would hamper the movement of 
			supplies and aid workers needed to help stop the epidemic in the 
			region.
 
 Other lawmakers, including some Democrats, have urged the White 
			House to name a point person to coordinate the response, lead 
			briefings, and command public confidence.
 
 "It's getting away from them, and this is becoming a real concern 
			for us," said a Democratic Senate aide, who spoke on condition of 
			anonymity.
 
 Proponents of the approach are seeking a figure like former Coast 
			Guard Admiral Thad Allen who took charge of the response to the BP 
			oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.
 
 Until now, Tom Frieden, the head of the Centers for Disease Control, 
			has been the face of the administration on Ebola. But the new 
			domestic cases have forced him to backtrack from some early 
			overconfident statements about the ability of the U.S. medical 
			system to contain the threat.
 
 The White House has resisted calls for a "czar" to pull together the 
			international and domestic response to the disease, arguing that 
			Lisa Monaco, Obama's homeland security aide, has been adeptly 
			filling that role. A White House spokesman declined to comment late 
			on Wednesday on whether that thinking has changed.
 
 But lawmakers worry Monaco, who also plays a lead role coordinating 
			U.S. efforts to combat Islamic State militants, has too much on her 
			plate.
 
 Over the past few weeks, the White House has sought to reassure the 
			public by trying to strike a balance between demonstrating the 
			administration is on top of the situation while not trying to feed a 
			sense of public panic.
 
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			On Wednesday, that balance shifted. A second Texas nurse contracted 
			Ebola from a patient who died from the disease. The nurse had 
			recently traveled by plane and officials began tracing a large 
			network of people who may have had contact with her. The nurse had 
			told the CDC she had a fever before she boarded the plane, but was 
			not stopped from boarding, a federal source said late on Wednesday. 
			Frieden earlier in the day told reporters she should not have been 
			aboard.
 The new infection contributed to a slide in the stock market.
 
 Obama, who seldom changes his schedule, no matter what crisis is 
			before him, canceled speeches and fundraisers in Connecticut, New 
			Jersey, Rhode Island and New York.
 
 He met with his cabinet for about two hours, and then told Americans 
			that the risk of a widespread outbreak was very low.
 
 Obama needs to make more such efforts to talk directly to Americans 
			about Ebola to show he is in control, said Peter LaMotte, a senior 
			vice president at Levick, a crisis communications firm.
 
 "He needs to be taking a leadership role rather than letting the 
			experts speak on his behalf," LaMotte said.
 
 Rather than taking the symbolic step of appointing an Ebola czar, 
			Obama should take a more forward role himself to explain the risks 
			and urge calm, said Stephen Morrison, a senior vice president at the 
			Center for Strategic and International Studies.
 
			
			 "The biggest danger here is public fear, and panic," Morrison said, 
			noting there may be more cases of Ebola to come.
 "The president, it seems to me, is the person who should be there, 
			walking that line," he said.
 
 (Additional reporting by Patricia Zengerle, Richard Cowan and David 
			Lawder; editing by Caren Bohan and Peter Henderson)
 
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