| 
			 But Ron Klain's low-profile first week as President Barack Obama's 
			behind-the-scenes Ebola "czar" has become another attack point for a 
			White House struggling to show it's on top of the crisis. 
 Since starting last Wednesday, Klain has been seen only once, in a 
			photo op on his first day, leaving health officials from the Centers 
			for Disease Control and Prevention and National Institutes of Health 
			- and Obama himself - to be the public "face" of the response.
 
 The White House has declined to give details about his activities, 
			especially what role he played as governors Andrew Cuomo of New York 
			and Chris Christie of New Jersey undermined the White House's 
			attempt to keep the nation calm about the risk posed by healthcare 
			workers returning from Ebola-stricken West Africa.
 
 "I recognize that all of you have not had a chance to see him and 
			talk to him every day, but the president certainly has," White House 
			spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters on Tuesday about Klein.
 
 Klain's lack of a public profile has fueled attacks by conservative 
			critics who last week seized upon his lack of medical expertise. 
			Klain, 53, is a lawyer and political insider who previously served 
			as chief of staff to Vice Presidents Joe Biden and Al Gore and left 
			the White House in 2011 to help AOL co-founder Steve Case oversee 
			his holdings.
 
 
			
			 
			The White House has tried to temper expectations that Klain will 
			emerge as a regular voice on Ebola. He might do the occasional 
			briefing or interview, "but that is pretty low on his to-do list," 
			Earnest said.
 
 Instead, Klain has briefed Obama on developments on six of seven 
			days since he began work, Earnest said.
 
 He has talked to some state officials, but not others.
 
 Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe spoke to Klain on Monday to tell 
			him how the state was monitoring people returning from West Africa, 
			a spokesman said.
 
 But the Texas Department of State Health Services hasn't had direct 
			contact with Klain, a spokeswoman there said.
 
 Florida health officials have not been contacted by Klain either, 
			said Nathan Dunn, a spokesman for the state agency collaborative 
			dealing with Ebola preparations.
 
 A 'RAISED TEMPO'
 
 Others have defended the pick and Klain's seven-day track record, 
			saying the job is a behind-the-scenes one that requires a deft 
			political touch to navigate state, federal and military officials.
 
 On Capitol Hill, Democrats have seen a "raised tempo" in 
			communications from the White House and other federal officials 
			since Klain took the reins, said Diana DeGette, a senior Democrat on 
			the House Energy and Commerce committee.
 
 Klain talked to New York officials when Dr. Craig Spencer was 
			diagnosed with Ebola, but the White House will not say what Klain 
			did in the first big public test of his coordination prowess - the 
			Friday night decision by Cuomo and Christie to quarantine doctors 
			and nurses returning from Ebola front lines.
 
			
            [to top of second column] | 
 
			The measures came ahead of and went far beyond what the federal 
			government was considering, and raised questions about whose 
			policies were better.
 The situation "accentuates the need" for Klain's role, said Mike 
			Feldman, who worked with Klain in the Clinton White House, and 
			describes him as "one of those guys who can go deep pretty quickly" 
			on policy and is deeply trusted by Obama and his team.
 
			"Give him a couple of days to get grounded and get his feet wet. 
			This is one of those situations that's rapidly unfolding," Feldman 
			said.
 COHERENT EXPLANATION NEEDED
 
 People who have seen Klain work on thorny government issues in the 
			past say his talents work best behind the scenes, and he leaves the 
			cameras to other players.
 
 "He wasn't often the face of communications or even policy, but he 
			was always somebody who was behind the scenes, strategizing on 
			both," said Jay Carney, who worked with Klain in Biden's office.
 
 Carney described him as an "unflappable" character who was adept at 
			dealing with governors and lawmakers while addressing legal, 
			political and communication problems during the massive 2009 
			economic stimulus package that invested $787 billion in projects 
			around the country.
 
			"He was extremely reassuring in this period when we coming in (to 
			office), and the world was falling apart economically, there were a 
			lot of tough fights," Carney said in an interview.
 It's highly unlikely Klain will play a similar role to Admiral Thad 
			Allen, who Obama put in charge of the government response to 
			plugging the gushing BP oil well in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, and 
			became the public face of that disaster.
 
 In an interview, Allen, who does not know Klain, said "one size 
			doesn't fit all" when leading during a complex crisis. But he said 
			it can help, at some point, to have a point person who can explain 
			what the government is doing.
 
			
			 
			
 "The country is looking for kind of a coherent explanation about how 
			that comes together," Allen said.
 
 (Reporting by Roberta Rampton, David Morgan, Ian Simpson, Jon 
			Herskovitz, Letitia Stein; Editing by Karey Van Hall and John 
			Pickering)
 
			[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |