Weekly Address
The White House
October 26, 2013
The White House
October 26, 2013
Hi, everybody. A few weeks ago, we launched an important new part of the Affordable Care Act.
It’s called the Marketplace. And for Americans without
health insurance, and Americans who buy insurance on their own because
they can’t get it at work, it’s a very big deal.
If you’re one of those people, the Affordable Care Act
makes you part of a big group plan for the first time. The Marketplace
is where you can apply and shop for affordable new health insurance
choices. It gathers insurers under one system to compete for your
business. And that choice and competition have actually helped bring
prices down.
Ultimately, the easiest way to buy insurance in this
Marketplace will be a new website, HealthCare.gov. But as you may have
heard, the site isn’t working the way it’s supposed to yet. That’s
frustrating for all of us who have worked so hard to make sure everyone
who needs it gets health care. And it’s especially frustrating for the
Americans who’ve been trying to get covered. The site has been visited
more than 20 million times so far. Nearly 700,000 people have applied
for coverage already. That proves just how much demand there is for
these new quality, affordable health care choices. And that’s why, in
the coming weeks, we are going to get it working as smoothly as it’s
supposed to. We’ve got people working overtime, 24/7, to boost capacity
and address these problems, every single day.
But even as we improve the website, remember that the
website isn’t the only way to apply for coverage under these new plans.
We’ve updated HealthCare.gov to offer more information about enrolling
over the phone, by mail, or in person with a specially-trained navigator
who can help answer your questions. Just call 1-800-318-2596 or visit
LocalHelp.HealthCare.gov. Don’t worry – these plans will not sell out.
We’re only a few weeks into a six-month open enrollment period, and
everyone who wants insurance through the Marketplace will get it.
Some people have poked fun at me this week for sounding
like an insurance salesman. And that’s okay. I’d still be out there
championing this law even if the website were perfect. I’ll never stop
fighting to help more hardworking Americans know the economic security
of health care. That’s something we should all want.
That’s why it’s also interesting to see Republicans in
Congress expressing so much concern that people are having trouble
buying health insurance through the new website – especially considering
they’ve spent the last few years so obsessed with denying those same
people access to health insurance that they just shut down the
government and threatened default over it.
As I’ve said many times before, I’m willing to work with
anyone, on any idea, who’s actually willing to make this law perform
better. But it’s well past the time for folks to stop rooting for its
failure. Because hardworking, middle-class families are rooting for its
success.
The Affordable Care Act gives people who’ve been stuck
with sky-high premiums because of preexisting conditions the chance to
get affordable insurance for the first time.
This law means that women can finally buy coverage that doesn’t charge them higher premiums than men for the same care.
And everyone who already has health insurance, whether
through your employer, Medicare, or Medicaid, will keep the benefits and
protections this law has already put in place. Three million more
young adults have health insurance on their parents’ plans because of
the Affordable Care Act. More than six million people on Medicare have
saved an average of $1,000 on their prescription medicine because of the
Affordable Care Act. Last year, more than 8 million Americans received
half a billion dollars in refunds from their insurers because of the
Affordable Care Act. And for tens of millions of women, preventive care
like mammograms and birth control are free because of the Affordable
Care Act.
That’s all part of this law, and it’s here to stay.
We did not fight so hard for this reform for so many years
just to build a website. We did it to free millions of American
families from the awful fear that one illness or injury – to yourself or
your child – might cost you everything you’d worked so hard to build.
We did it to cement the principle that in this country, the security of
health care is not a privilege for a fortunate few, but a right for
every one of us to enjoy. We have already delivered on part of that
promise, and we will not rest until the work is done.
Thank you, and have a great weekend.
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