Outgoing health czar Kathleen Sebelius said she doesn’t have any regrets about her tenure, despite the disastrous rollout of the Affordable Care Act health exchange website last fall. But Sebelius did seem to allow that she made mistakes in the lead-up to the site’s launch.
Sebelius, who this week announced she’d be stepping down as Secretary of Health and Human Services, was asked by NBC’s Andrea Mitchell whether she had any regrets.
“I don’t,” Sebelius replied, in a clip that aired Sunday on Meet the Press. “If I had a magic wand and could go back to mid-September, based on what I know now – I thought I was getting the best information from the best experts, having outside and inside people come report, look, measure. But clearly that didn’t go well.”
Millions of people were prevented from enrolling in Obamacare last fall, thanks to technical problems with the website that was supposed to be used to apply for the law’s benefits. That led to weeks of negative press coverage about the law’s rollout, and has helped put Democrats in a hole going into this fall’s midterms. It took an intense White House effort, involving a team of high-level Silicon Valley experts, to get the site working properly.
The announcement of Sebelius’s departure came just a week after the administration said that, despite the serious early problems with the website, over 7 million people had signed up for Obamacare through the federal exchanges—meaning the law had met its target for enrollees by this point.









