Civil rights groups open K Street office in final health-care push

November 4, 2009 · Print This Article

Krissah Thompson, Washington Post

- After some small-scale, disjointed efforts to push for health care reform, civil rights groups are renting temporary office space on K Street and combining their efforts to run an operations center with the sole goal of lobbying on health care policy.

The office will be run by staffers from the National Urban League, the NAACP and the Black Leadership Forum. Over the next two weeks, they will coordinate rallies in 10 cities, run a phone bank where volunteers will pepper members of Congress with calls and keep up with the latest developments in the debate.

The groups are calling the effort a “war room” and plan to staff it long hours each day, creating a central hub for the civil rights groups to share ideas and staff resources. The voices of minorities, who are disproportionately represented among the poor and uninsured and could benefit the most from reform — and who also are more likely than others to have chronic illnesses such as diabetes — have been a small part of the contentious health care debate.

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