[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 134 (Wednesday, October 2, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H6110-H6111]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                              {time}  1045
                       AFFORDABLE HEALTHCARE ACT

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Thompson of Pennsylvania). The Chair 
recognizes the gentleman from New Jersey (Mr. Holt) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. HOLT. Mr. Speaker, the health care marketplaces are finally open. 
The only complaint is that people are so eager to learn more about 
their options and to sign up that too many people logged on yesterday.
  Now, to hear my colleagues from across the aisle describe this day, 
you might expect to look out the window and witness the beginning of, 
as ``Ghostbusters'' once put it, 40 years of darkness--earthquakes, 
volcanos, the dead rising from the grave, dogs and cats living 
together, mass hysteria. Perhaps these warnings were overblown.
  The start of the Affordable Care Act resulted in exactly zero people 
locked out of their offices with their paychecks on hold. By contrast, 
the Republican shutdown has furloughed 800,000 Federal employees.
  Exactly zero people yesterday were deprived of their annual flu shots 
because of the Affordable Care Act. In fact, ObamaCare has made 
preventive care for things like vaccines free, without copay, to 
insured patients nationwide. By contrast, the Republican shutdown has 
forced the CDC to halt its annual seasonal influenza program, just as 
flu season is getting underway.
  Because of the Affordable Care Act, exactly zero infants yesterday 
were deprived of healthy food and nutrition information. By contrast, 
the Republican shutdown has put at risk the entire Women, Infants, and 
Children program, which provides some 9 million Americans with the 
support they need to feed their children.
  The Republican shutdown has also brought to a standstill critical 
lifesaving biomedical research being conducted at the NIH and NSF. 
Exactly zero people yesterday went untreated because of the ACA for 
foodborne illnesses. By contrast, the Republican shutdown has forced 
the FDA to cease many of its food safety operations.
  The Affordable Care Act has not ushered in an era of doom and gloom 
that the Republicans promised. Instead, it has offered hope and 
opportunity for good health care coverage.
  Here is the reality: The ACA is helping my constituents who 
previously found health insurance out of reach. The access provided by 
ACA is long overdue. Rather than seek delay, we should be embracing it.
  For years I've been hearing from people like Nicole, from Lawrence, 
who writes not about the fear of the ACA but, rather, ``the fear that 
the health care of your family will bankrupt you and that your lack of 
resources will leave you and your loved ones vulnerable to sickness and 
death.''
  Now, I also hear optimism--optimism--that comes from the options that 
can now be found in the new marketplace. Just ask Mary, from Princeton, 
who wrote me earlier this week:

       Please do not allow the implementation of ObamaCare to be 
     delayed. I've been waiting and waiting for a time when my 
     adult children would be able to afford health insurance.

  She goes on to say that the health care marketplace has given her 
``the opportunity to review plans with them and to assist them to 
choose the best plan.''
  There is the single mother from Scotch Plains who wrote me:

       I am a registered Republican, and I am embarrassed by all 
     that has been happening for the last few days. The Tea Party 
     and some Republicans keep yelling that they're speaking for 
     the people. Well, they're not speaking for me or anyone I 
     know.
       ObamaCare must be given a chance. I have been without 
     coverage since my COBRA ended 2 years ago. I was unable to 
     get reasonable coverage at a reasonable rate. I don't want 
     charity; I'm not looking for a handout. I want affordable 
     health care. I've been praying I stay healthy. I'm patiently 
     waiting for the affordable care exchanges so that I can 
     finally try my luck there. Please, please don't let the Tea 
     Party take this away from me and so many others who need it.

  Now, I wish my colleagues on the other side of the aisle would accept 
this as the good news that it is. I wish they would accept that their 
stories of doom and gloom for ObamaCare were wrong. But instead, we're 
learning that the dire stories were not a prediction, they were a 
threat.
  The Tea Party, confronted with the prospect of a duly passed law that 
has been upheld by the Supreme Court, have thrown a temper tantrum. 
They have taken hostage the entire Federal Government, and they have 
sabotaged the process of self-government--all to

[[Page H6111]]

prevent Americans from gaining access to affordable health care.
  Let's make the health care law work as well as possible. Let's, 
together, make our other government services--necessary services--work 
as well as possible.

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