[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 145 (Monday, October 14, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H6573]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STAND DOWN ON INDIVIDUAL MANDATE
(Mr. BURGESS asked and was given permission to address the House for
1 minute.)
Mr. BURGESS. Mr. Speaker:
Consumers will be able to go online. They will be able to
get a determination of what tax subsidies they are eligible
for; they will be able to see premium net of subsidy; and
they will be able to sign up.
Those were the words spoken by the head of the Office of Consumer
Information and Insurance Oversight 3 weeks ago at a committee hearing
of Energy and Commerce. I had asked for a yes or no answer to the
question: Will the exchanges be ready on October 1? You heard his
answer.
In The New York Times this weekend, a very insightful article: ``From
the Start, Signs of Trouble at the Health Portal.'' The exchanges have
been called excruciatingly embarrassing by no less than the President's
press secretary for his first term. He went on to say:
I hope some people are fired, those people who were
supposed to be able to make this work.
The blame-shifting between contractors and agency officials is just
beginning. Further quoting from the article in The New York Times this
weekend:
``These are not glitches,'' said an insurance executive who
has participated in many conference calls on the Federal
exchange.
The extent of the problems is pretty enormous. At the end
of our calls, people say, ``It is awful, just awful.''
But here is the deal: everyone is required to sign up for this
enormously embarrassing glitch that has been foisted upon us by the
executive branch. It is time for us to stand down on the individual
mandate.
____________________