Updated 12:12 p.m.
As President Barack Obama gave one of his best defenses of his signature health care law Thursday morning, news broke that his administration plans to again postpone a piece of the rollout slated for Oct. 1.
Small businesses will have an extra month to begin enrollment in the new health care exchanges, according to Reuters. The Obama administration had previously delayed several components of the law including a rule that stipulates businesses with more than 50 employees must provide insurance and a special insurance exchange designed for small businesses.
Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius defended the White House’s decision, arguing that insurance policies will still take effect on track even though the sign-up date has been delayed.
“Insurance never starts until Jan. 1 for individuals or for small-business owners. It was always a lead time to get coverage,” Sebelius said on MSNBC.
The juxtaposition couldn’t be more ironic: liberals have been waiting for Obama to make the kind of full-throated case for the law that he did Thursday. And Republicans are sure to pounce on the news that a piece of the law is being postponed. Conservatives in Congress have been pushing for a year-long delay of the entire law, citing computer glitches and other problems.
The White House has repeatedly given extensions and exceptions to states and businesses that requested more time to fully embrace the law.
Even so, Obama said ultimately the law will work, once it gets going.
“Once it’s working really well I guarantee you they will not call it Obamacare,” he said from Prince George’s Community College in Maryland.
The White House had been criticized this summer by not only Republicans, but fellow Democrats who argued Obama should do more on the law’s rollout.
Sen. Barbara Boxer of California said immediately after Obama’s speech Thursday it was the case she was waiting to hear.
“I just feel that the president today really had the energy that we need at this point to make sure everyone understands,” the Democrat senator said on MSNBC Thursday.
During the speech, Obama said health coverage is “a right,” not a privilege, liberal rhetoric that the president has often avoided when talking about the health care law.









