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U.S. health adviser wants end to partisan fighting over Obamacare
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[September 09, 2014] By
David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack
Obama's top health adviser on Monday called for an end to partisan
bickering over Obamacare, saying the public and businesses are sending a
clear message to Washington that it is time to move on with implementing
the law.
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"The Affordable Care Act is clearly working," U.S. Health and Human
Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell told a university audience in
remarks that unveiled a new administration message about the
successes of the healthcare reform law just as the midterm election
campaign debate about its future intensifies.
"What I've been hearing over and over ... (is) enough already with
the back and forth. We just want to move forward," she said in her
first major public address.
"We're not here to fight last year's battles," Burwell added. "The
Affordable Care Act is not about making a point. It's about making
progress."
Burwell took over the health secretary job from Kathleen Sebelius in
June as part of an administration effort to begin a new chapter for
healthcare reform after four years of political and legal challenges
from conservative foes.
Officials with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
said the aim is to stress the affordability of Obamacare insurance,
new access to medical services for the uninsured and the quality of
coverage as the administration prepares for a new three-month open
enrollment period beginning on Nov. 15.
The administration will also underscore studies and polling that
suggest Obama's signature domestic policy achievement has
significantly reduced the number of uninsured Americans by
subsidizing the cost of private insurance for lower-income people
and expanding the Medicaid program for the poor in more than half of
the 50 U.S. states.
But a public outreach campaign, already under way to drive
enrollment for 2015 coverage, will also coincide with the Oct. 1
anniversary of the disastrous rollout of Obamacare, a date
Republicans are likely to mark with blistering rhetoric as the fall
campaign for the Nov. 4 election gets fully under way.
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Obama's Affordable Care Act remains unpopular with large segments of
the voting public. In Reuters/Ipsos polling of 384 people over the
first five days of September, 51 percent of respondents said they
disapproved of Obama’s handling of healthcare reform, while 39
percent said they approved and 10 percent said they did not know.
The poll has a margin of error of 5 percentage points.
In early August, 57 percent of 1,599 respondents said they opposed
the healthcare law, while 43 percent favored it. That poll had a
margin of error of 2.6 percentage points.
Analysts say the issue is not proving to be as big as expected with
potential voters. But Republicans still hope public discontent will
help them take control of the Senate and dismantle the legislation.
Healthcare reform will be front and center later this week during a
Republican-led House of Representatives oversight hearing at which
top HHS and Internal Revenue Service officials are slated to
testify.
(Additional reporting by Gabriel Debenedetti; Editing by Lisa
Shumaker)
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