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			 "The Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare, is working. It's working 
			better than we anticipated, certainly working a lot better than many 
			of the critics talked about early on," President Barack Obama said 
			in a video linked to the White House tweet. 
			 
			Administration officials have said they expected 9.1 million people 
			to be enrolled in coverage and up to date on insurance payments by 
			the end of the year. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office had 
			predicted 12 million enrollees for 2015. 
			 
			Last April, the Obama administration announced that more than 8 
			million people had selected plans for 2014. But by the end of last 
			year, only 6.7 million were still enrolled. 
			
			  Obamacare's open enrollment period for 2015 began on Nov. 15 and 
			closed on Sunday. 
			 
			The White House said there had been a surge of applications in the 
			last nine days of enrollment, particularly on Sunday. 
			 
			"Sunday, February 15 was the biggest enrollment day ever: more new 
			consumers signed up for health coverage than on any day this open 
			enrollment period or the last," the White House said in a statement. 
			 
			The U.S. Health and Human Services Department said on Saturday that 
			a technical problem had prevented some consumers from enrolling but 
			that the issue, involving income verification, was fixed late on 
			Saturday. 
			 
			The department said on Saturday that anyone who had been unable to 
			submit an application because income could not be verified due to 
			that problem or any other technical issue would receive an extension 
			for enrollment. 
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			Plans for Obamacare, formally known as the Affordable Care Act, are 
			sold on HealthCare.gov for 37 states. The other 13 states plus 
			Washington, D.C., run their own websites. 
			 
			The Obama administration said last week that 2015 Obamacare 
			subsidies were averaging $268 a month for people in the 37 states 
			who had qualified for federal assistance. 
			 
			(Reporting by Breaking News Team; Editing by Peter Cooney and Lisa 
			Shumaker) 
			
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