The government’s health care website is an inexcusable mess–and neither President Obama (speaking in Texas) nor Health and Human Services Secretary Sebelius (testifying to the Senate Finance Committee) tried to defend it.
But that doesn’t mean the sign-up deadline should be extended any further, or that the health care reform law itself is flawed.
Republicans and some Democrats are calling on the Obama administration to extend the open-enrollment period or delay the individual mandate in light of the rocky rollout of the Affordable Care Act. But HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius told senators that is not an option.
“People’s lives depend on this,” she said on Wednesday
“Delaying the Affordable Care Act wouldn’t delay people’s cancer, or diabetes or Parkinson’s…mental health services or cholesterol screenings or prenatal care. Delaying the Affordable Care Act doesn’t delay the foreclosure notices for families forced into bankruptcy by unpayable medical bills. It doesn’t delay the higher costs all of us pay when uninsured Americans are left with no choice but to rely on emergency rooms for care,” she added.
In Dallas Wednesday evening, Obama urged Texans to push GOP Gov. Rick Perry–a ferocious opponent of the Affordable Care Act–to expand Medicare. “It’s a no-brainer,” he said: there’s no state in the country “that actually needs this more than in Texas.”
The Lone Star State has one of the highest uninsured rates in the country at 28.8%.
“As challenging as this may seem sometimes, as frustrating as healthcare.gov may be sometimes, we are going to get his done,” Obama said.
The Senate Finance Committee hearing became heated when Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas hammered Sebelius about Obama having repeatedly told Americans that if they like their current health plan they can keep it. Since then, some insurers have sent cancellation notices to customers whose current policies don’t meet the coverage standards of the law.
Cornyn asked Sebelius whether Obama’s statement was true or false. When she would not directly answer, Cornyn interrupted and said, “My time is limited” and insisted the record reflect that Sebelius refused to answer his question. At one point the exchange got so tense that the committee’s chairman, Max Baucus of Montana, had to jump in.
Sebelius’ testimony comes exactly a week after she was grilled by the Republican-run House and Commerce Committee. During those remarks, she apologized to the American people, telling them “you deserve better” and promised that the glitches on the website –which took years to build and cost hundreds of millions of dollars — would be fixed by the end of the month.









