Posted on 11/01/2013 7:08:11 AM PDT by Qbert
Senate Democrats vented their frustrations over the faulty rollout of the Affordable Care Act in a meeting Thursday with White House chief of staff Denis McDonough and other senior officials.
Theres a lot of frustration, everywhere, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) said after the meeting.
McDonough tried to assure angry senators he is personally taking charge of the disparate federal offices in charge of implementing the massive law, which has been plagued by technical errors.
He gave us the impression that hes taking charge of the different elements and cracking the whip. He said to let him know if we had concerns, said a Democratic senator who attended the meeting.
Marilyn Tavenner, the administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and Jeffrey Zients, whom President Obama has tapped to troubleshoot the bugs afflicting HealthCare.gov, also attended the meeting.
Democratic senators facing reelection in 2014 were some of the most vocal critics.
One lawmaker described Sens. Al Franken (D-Minn.) and Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) as visibly agitated.
Shaheen demanded to know why the rollout of HealthCare.gov had become so riddled with problems.
A Democratic aide said Shaheen asked the administration officials for a contingency plan in case technical problems are not fixed by Nov. 30. They replied they are working on one but did not have a plan to share as of Thursday.
Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), who has spent more of his career in the private sector than in government, also weighed in forcefully, according to the source.
"I am not happy with the website. That is a pretty common thought that we all feel," Warner later told reporters.
I think we ought to give them the time to make the improvements. But we need to see the improvements. We need to make this a much easier, consumer-friendly process," he added.
Some lawmakers complained the administration has not done a good job of communicating what its doing to overhaul HealthCare.gov.
[People] are unhappy. We want to see improvements. Theyve got to let people know what theyre doing, as theyre doing it, said Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio).
Brown said too many people still dont know how to sign up for health plans through the insurance exchanges.
This is a situation where too many people dont know about the website, dont know how to apply, he said.
Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) told colleagues the White House and Democratic lawmakers need to do a better job telling positive stories about the Affordable Care Act.
She lamented that insurance companies have had it both ways by blaming ObamaCare for rising premiums and reaping millions of new customers because of the law, according to a lawmaker who attended the meeting.
Administration officials told Democratic lawmakers that they would keep the website running while they tried to fix the problems.
They have evolved a method of proceeding, which is to keep the site up, which they believe is most effective in terms of getting the problems ironed out as opposed to shutting it down, said Feinstein. Well see.
McDonough put a positive spin on the heated meeting after exiting the Mansfield Room.
I think we had a really good discussion, he said.
Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) said many of her colleagues "are anxious for questions to be answered aggressively and effectively," but added they are already seeing improvements in the website and other parts of the rollout.
"I think time will fix a huge number of these problems, as it did on every major program like this that has ever rolled out," she said, referencing both Medicare and Medicare Part D.
But other Democrats are skeptical about promises from the administration about how long it will take to fix the enrollment process.
"They hope to have good things to tell us as they get those fixes in place," said Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.). "I don't think there is confidence by anybody in the room. This is more of a 'show me' moment. We were all confident the system was going to be up and operating Oct. 1 and now we are not confident until it's real."
Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), the Senate Democrats' messaging guru, admitted it was a rocky meeting but emphasized that lawmakers felt their concerns were addressed.
"It was a tough meeting, there were a lot of hard questions," he said. "A lot of concerns were allayed."
Lawmakers discussed a proposal by Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) to let people keep their health plans, even if they fall short of the requirements set under the new law, according to another lawmaker in the room.
Landrieu expects several Democrats to co-sponsor the proposal.
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) told reporters that he plans to sign onto Landrieus bill.
Sen. Mark Pryor (D-Ark.), who faces a tough race next year, said he is in the midst of reviewing a draft.
Bernie Becker and Erik Wasson contributed.
Squirm, baby, squirm.
Watch Waters on Orelly for your answer on how the dummies got into office!
Senator Claire McCaskill? The same liar who especially helped the Indonesian, Barak Hussein Obama, claim citizenship? That Claire McCaskill? Do not believe one word out of her droopy mouth!
“I don’t think there is confidence by anybody in the room.”
nor in the rest of the country . . .
so what is their fall back plan (and I don’t mean single payer even if that is what they want and will try to do next —)
I mean what will they SAY on Dec. 1st?
Their spin and lies aren’t fooling people any more.
Or are they making it up as they go along?
Pretend it will be fine on 1 Dec and roll out the marketing plan to bring in the young healthy people? who have another whole month to figure out they are the suckers and a slick marketing plan is not going to fool them?
Offer to delay penalties but with no provisions for the people who lost their coverage to get any COVERAGE never mind freedom from penalties. People who lost the plans they liked will be uninsured which they do not like? Pass the If You Like Your Plan you can Keep it?
Not mere curiosity. They always scheme in dark rooms and pop up with a totally unified message to hit the airways, and our opposition is caught off guard.
Each of THEIR possible proposals come 1 Dec has to be brain stormed NOW for the appropriate counter measures and counter message.
“reaping millions of new customers because of the law”
I bet she can’t back this up with real data.
“Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) told colleagues the White House and Democratic lawmakers need to do a better job telling positive stories about the Affordable Care Act.”
Then she can tell us positive stories about the Washington Redskins.
Notice they didn’t get to meet with King iWon Thinskin or the Gorn who’s actually running things. So, basically, the WH just shined them on, and they’re too clueless to see that.
Like the first officer on the Titanic telling the band to play "Nearer My God to Thee?"
November 30TH? We'll see!
And like Kevin Bacon (Chip Diller) in Animal House? ... All Is Well!
Oh, this is too easy - let me guess . . .
the White House “allayed” Healthcare.gov fears by, wait for it. . .
More Lies.
You don't happen to know who is on Dancing With The Stars next week, or what hilarious hijinks are happening in Honey Boo-boo's world, do you?
She must have been being facetious
Nobody is that ignorant
That is essential battle-space prep for moving on to single payer. "ObamaCare would work fine if the insurance companies were removed."
Evidently their voters are even more stupid than they are - hard to believe but there it is.
It’s not the government’s job to be in the business of selling products to people. There’s no reason to believe they could ever do a good job of that, especially in an industry that is firmly well-established in the private sector.
I feel it won’t be long before we see a bunch of Dems up for re-election joining Senate RINOs in another “Gang Of” effort to delay/replace Obamacare.
Oh, those poor, poor little authoritarians.
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