The White House
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release
October 30, 2013
Remarks by the President and Governor Deval Patrick on the Affordable Care Act
Faneuil Hall
Boston, Massachusetts
Boston, Massachusetts
3:50 P.M. EDT
GOVERNOR PATRICK: How are you? Good afternoon, everybody. (Applause.) How’s Red Sox Nation this afternoon? (Applause.)
Ladies and gentlemen, brothers and sisters, fellow
citizens, I have the high honor of introducing to you the President of
the United States. (Applause.) But, of course, you folks already know
him. (Laughter.) So as the President is standing just offstage, I want
to take my time here at the podium -- (laughter) -- to introduce all of
you to him.
In this storied hall today, Mr. President, are the
architects and advocates for health care reform in Massachusetts.
(Applause.) This gathering right here is the broad coalition --
providers, payers, patients, consumers, policymakers, academics,
business and labor, from both political parties, or no party at all --
who came together to invent health care reform in Massachusetts and
then, importantly, stuck together to refine it as we moved forward.
(Applause.)
You are the leaders who, when we learned a hard lesson or
hit a wall, stuck with it and with each other because of the shared
value that health care is a public good and that every citizen deserves
access to quality, affordable care. (Applause.)
Quality, affordable care accessible to all improves lives,
and in many cases, saves lives. It gives peace of mind and economic
security to working families. It increases productivity for large and
small employers alike. It creates jobs and contributes to the strength
of the Massachusetts economy. It is a powerful statement of who we are
as a commonwealth. (Applause.)
And by every reasonable measure, it has been a success for
us here in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. (Applause.) How do we
know? Virtually, every resident in the commonwealth is insured today.
(Applause.) More private companies offer insurance to their employees
than ever before. Over 90 percent of our residents have a primary care
physician. Preventive care is up and health disparities are down.
(Applause.) Most important of all, on a whole range of measures, we are
healthier both physically and mentally.
Over all these years, expansion itself has added only
about 1 percent of state spending to our budget. And thanks to the
collective, continued hard work of this coalition, premiums are finally
easing up. Premium base rates were increasing over 16 percent just a
few years ago. Today, increases average less than 2 percent.
(Applause.)
And thanks to the President, America can look forward to
the successes that Massachusetts has experienced these last seven
years. (Applause.)
The truth is policy only matters when and where it touches
people. I know this policy matters because I've met people all across
the commonwealth, in every walk of life, whose lives have been improved
or saved because of the care our reforms made possible. A couple of
them are here today.
Laura Ferreira -- where are you, Laura? There you are.
Owns her own hair salon and is responsible for providing health
insurance to her family of five, including her son, Mason, who’s right
here with her. Mason has a rare genetic condition. Laura is able to
afford his medicine because they found coverage through our Connecter,
our version of the ACA marketplace. This policy matters. (Applause.)
David Gilloran works as a waiter. Where are you David?
There you are. Thank you for being here. Soon after getting coverage
through the Connector, David was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. His
treatment was covered, and he is back to his old life and swimming for
exercise. God bless you, David. (Applause.)
Brian Thurber left his law firm job to become an
entrepreneur in Massachusetts. Brian, where are you? There he is.
Because he was able to access quality insurance directly through the
Connector, he is chasing his entrepreneurial dreams and on his way to
becoming a creator of jobs for others without -- being exposed to a
health emergency along the way. Keep going. Good luck to you.
(Applause.)
Hundreds of thousands of Massachusetts people don’t fear
going bankrupt from medical bills, or being thrown off their insurance
if they get really sick, or being declared ineligible for insurance
because they were seriously ill sometime in the past.
If policy matters where it touches people, Mr. President,
this policy matters a lot. Health care reform is working for the people
of Massachusetts, and it will work for the people of America.
(Applause.)
My Republican predecessor signed the legislation to expand
health care reform in Massachusetts right here in this room, on this
very stage. His chief legislative partner was the Democratic state
senator, Robert Travaglini, who was here then and is here today. Where
are you, Trav? Thank you. (Applause.)
So was our beloved Ted Kennedy. So were many of the
members of the coalition who are here again today. And they have worked
right alongside my team and me these last seven years to refine and
improve the means while staying true to the ends. I am proud of what we
and they have accomplished, and I think they’re proud, too, and ought
to be. (Applause.)
But our launch seven years ago was not flawless.
(Laughter.) We asked an IT staffer who has been at our Connector since
the beginning what the start of implementing reform was like. And this
is what he said, and I’m quoting: “We didn’t have a complicated
eligibility process back then, but we did have outages caused by traffic
peaks. We experienced some issues with data mapping of plan detail
that carriers called us on. Our provider searches were not good, and
the website was a constant work in progress over the first few years.
But other than that, it was smooth.” (Laughter.)
Any of this sound familiar, Mr. President?
So we started out with a website that needed work. We had
a lot of people with a lot of reasonable questions and not a good
enough way to get them the answers. But people were patient, we had
good leadership, and that same coalition stuck with it and with us to
work through the fixes, tech surge and all. Why? Why? Because health
reform in Massachusetts, like the Affordable Care Act, is not a
website. It’s a values statement. (Applause.) It's about insuring
people against a medical catastrophe. It's about being our brothers'
and our sisters' keeper by helping others help themselves.
The website glitches are inconvenient and annoying. They
must be fixed and I am confident they will be. But I hope you know, Mr.
President, that the same folks who pretend to be outraged about the
website not working didn’t want the ACA to work in the first place.
(Applause.) The urgency of fixing what's not working is, as we all
know, about the American people who need simple, reliable and convenient
access to information about coverage -- not about silencing critics who
will never be silenced.
You and the Congress looked to Massachusetts, Mr.
President, as a model for how to insure working people, and through
that, how to help them lead better, more productive lives. As you turn
to the vital work of making that federal IT system work, we also want to
be a model for how to keep your eye on the prize, and how, working
together, you put people first. (Applause.) The people here, all in
this coalition, totally get that.
So, Mr. President, welcome to the capital of Red Sox
Nation. (Applause.) And welcome, also, to the future of affordable,
accessible health care for everybody. (Applause.)
Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States. (Applause.)
THE PRESIDENT: Hello, Boston! (Applause.) It's good to
be back in Boston. (Applause.) It's good to be back in Boston because
one of America's best governors introduced me -- Deval Patrick. Give
him a big round of applause. (Applause.)
It's good to see Congressman Bill Keating here. Give Bill
a big round of applause. (Applause.) I want to praise somebody who's
not here -- I just left him -- but he wears his heart on his sleeve. He
loves this city so much, and it shows in what he's been doing for years
now -- one of America's best mayors, Tom Menino. (Applause.)
And it's good to see all of you. I was just at the
airport -- Deval was kind enough to meet me, along with Mayor Menino.
And Mayor Menino went back to city hall to work so he could wrap up in
time for the first pitch. I understand that. (Laughter.) I am well
aware that a presidential visit is not the biggest thing going on today
in Boston. (Laughter and applause.) I understand that. I tried to
grow a beard, but Michelle, she wasn't having it. (Laughter.)
I am also old enough to remember a time when the Red Sox
were not in the World Series three times in 10 years. (Laughter.) But I
know the chance to win one at home for the first time since 1918 is a
pretty special thing. (Applause.) So I promise we will be done here in
time -- (laughter) -- for everybody to head over to Fenway and maybe
see Big Papi blast another homer. (Applause.)
And maybe the other Sox will do better next year. (Laughter.) You can hope. You can dream. (Laughter.)
The reason I’m here, though, is because this is the hall
where, seven years ago, Democrats and Republicans came together to make
health reform a reality for the people of Massachusetts. It’s where
then-Governor Mitt Romney, Democratic legislators, Senator Ted Kennedy,
many of the folks who are here today joined forces to connect the
progressive vision of health care for all with some ideas about markets
and competition that had long been championed by conservatives.
And as Deval just said, it worked. (Applause.) It worked. Health reform --
PROTESTORS: Mr. President -- don't punish me. For our generation, stop the pipeline! Mr. President --
THE PRESIDENT: Okay. We're talking about health care today, but we will --
PROTESTORS: Mr. President --
AUDIENCE: Booo --
THE PRESIDENT: No, no, no, it’s okay. That is the wrong
rally. (Laughter and applause.) We had the climate change rally back
in the summer. (Laughter.) This is the health care rally. (Applause.)
So health care reform in this state was a success. That
doesn’t mean it was perfect right away. There were early problems to
solve. There were changes that had to be made. Anybody here who was
involved in it can tell you that. As Deval just said, enrollment was
extremely slow. Within a month, only about a hundred people had signed
up -- a hundred. But then 2,000 had signed up, and then a few more
thousand after that. And by the end of the year, 36,000 people had
signed up.
And the community all came together. You even had the Red
Sox help enlist people to get them covered. And pretty soon, the
number of young uninsured people had plummeted. When recession struck,
the financial security of health care sheltered families from deeper
hardship. And today, there is nearly universal coverage in
Massachusetts, and the vast majority of its citizens are happy with
their coverage. (Applause.)
And by the way, all the parade of horribles, the worst
predictions about health care reform in Massachusetts never came true.
They're the same arguments that you're hearing now. Businesses didn’t
stop covering workers; the share of employers who offered insurance
increased. People didn’t get left behind; racial disparities
decreased. Care didn’t become unaffordable; costs tracked what was
happening in other places that wasn’t covering everybody.
Now, Mitt Romney and I ran a long and spirited campaign
against one another, but I’ve always believed that when he was governor
here in Massachusetts, he did the right thing on health care. And then
Deval did the right thing by picking up the torch and working to make
the law work even better. And it’s because you guys had a proven model
that we built the Affordable Care Act on this template of proven,
bipartisan success. Your law was the model for the nation’s law.
(Applause.)
So let’s look at what’s happened. Today, the Affordable
Care Act requires insurance companies to abide by some of the strongest
consumer protections this country has ever known -- a true Patient’s
Bill of Rights. (Applause.) No more discriminating against kids with
preexisting conditions. (Applause.) No more dropping your policy when
you get sick and need it most. (Applause.) No more lifetime limits or
restrictive annual limits. (Applause.) Most plans now have to cover
free preventive care like mammograms and birth control. (Applause.)
Young people can stay on their parents’ plans until they turn 26. All
of this is in place right now. It is working right now. (Applause.)
Now, the last element of this began on October 1st. It’s
when the Affordable Care Act created a new marketplace for quality,
private insurance plans for the 15 percent or so of Americans who don’t
have health care, and for the 5 percent of Americans who have to buy it
on their own and they’re not part of a group, which means they don't get
as good a deal.
And this new marketplace was built on the Massachusetts
model. It allows these Americans who have been locked out to get a
better deal from insurers -- they’re pooling their purchasing power as
one big group. And insurers want their business, which means they give
them a better deal, and they compete for that business. And as a
result, insurers in the marketplace, they can't use your medical history
to charge you more. If you’ve been sick, you finally have the same
chance to buy quality, affordable health care as everybody else.
A lot of people will qualify for new tax credits under
this law that will bring down costs even further, so that if you lose
your job, or you start a new business, or you’re self-employed, or
you're a young person trying several jobs until you find that one that
sticks, you’re going to be able to be insured -- insurance that goes
with you and gives you freedom to pursue whatever you want, without fear
that accident or illness will derail your dreams.
Now, this marketplace is open now. Insurance companies
are competing for that business. The deal is good; the prices are low.
But, let’s face it, we've had a problem. The website hasn’t worked the
way it’s supposed to over these last couple of weeks. And as a
consequence, a lot of people haven’t had a chance to see just how good
the prices for quality health insurance through these marketplaces
really are.
Now, ultimately, this website, healthcare.gov, will be the
easiest way to shop for and buy these new plans, because you can see
all these plans right next to each other and compare prices and see what
kind of coverage it provides. But, look, there’s no denying it, right
now, the website is too slow, too many people have gotten stuck. And I
am not happy about it. And neither are a lot of Americans who need
health care, and they’re trying to figure out how they can sign up as
quickly as possible. So there’s no excuse for it. And I take full
responsibility for making sure it gets fixed ASAP. We are working
overtime to improve it every day. (Applause.) Every day.
And more people are successfully buying these new plans
online than they were a couple of weeks ago, and I expect more people
will be able to buy conveniently online every single day as we move
forward. We’re going to get these problems resolved.
Now, in the meantime, you can still apply for coverage
over the phone, or by mail, or in person, because those plans are
waiting and you’re still able to get the kind of affordable, reliable
health insurance that’s been out of reach for too many people for too
long.
So I am old enough to remember when there was not such a
thing as a website. (Laughter.) I know that’s shocking to people.
(Laughter.) But the point is I’m confident these marketplaces will
work, because Massachusetts has shown that the model works and we know
what’s being offered by these insurers. (Applause.) We know it’s going
to work.
And so far, choice and competition in the new national
marketplaces have helped keep costs lower than even we projected. In
fact, nearly half of all single, uninsured 18-to-34-year-olds may be
able to buy insurance for 50 bucks a month or less. Less than your
cellphone bill, less than your cable bill. (Applause.) And one study
shows that nearly 6 in 10 uninsured Americans may find coverage for 100
bucks a month or less, even if they’re older than 34.
And, frankly, if every governor was working as hard as
Deval, or Governor O’Malley in Maryland, or Governor Cuomo in New York,
to make this law work for their citizens, as opposed to thinking
politically, about 8 in 10 Americans would be getting health insurance
for less than 100 bucks a month. (Applause.)
And, by the way, it’s not just in Massachusetts. Look at
Kentucky. Governor Steve Beshear, who’s a Democrat, is like a man
possessed with helping more people get covered. He thinks it’s the
right thing to do. Keep in mind I did not win in Kentucky.
(Laughter.) But there are a lot of uninsured people in Kentucky, and
they’re signing up.
Oregon has covered 10 percent of its uninsured citizens
already because of the Affordable Care Act. Ten percent of the
uninsured have already gotten coverage. (Applause.)
Arkansas -- I didn’t win that state either -- (laughter)
-- has covered almost 14 percent of its uninsured already. (Applause.)
That’s already happened.
And you’ve got some Republican governors, like Governor
Kasich of Ohio, who’ve put politics aside and they’re expanding Medicaid
through this law to cover millions of people.
Now, unfortunately, there are others that are so locked in
to the politics of this thing that they won't lift a finger to help
their own people, and that’s leaving millions of Americans uninsured
unnecessarily. That’s a shame. Because if they put as much energy into
making this law work as they do in attacking the law, Americans would
be better off. (Applause.) Americans would be better off.
So that’s the Affordable Care Act: Better protections for
Americans with insurance; a new marketplace for Americans without
insurance; new tax credits to help folks afford it; more choice, more
competition; real health care security not just for the uninsured or
underinsured, but for all of us -- because we pay more in premiums and
taxes when Americans without good insurance visit the emergency room.
(Applause.) We get taxed.
And since we all benefit, there are parts of this law that
also require everybody to contribute, that require everybody to take
some measure of responsibility. So, to help pay for the law, the
wealthiest Americans –- families who make more than $250,000 a year –-
they've got to pay a little bit more. The most expensive employer
health insurance plans no longer qualify for unlimited tax breaks. Some
folks aren't happy about that, but it's the right thing to do.
Just like in Massachusetts, most people who can afford
health insurance have to take responsibility to buy health insurance, or
pay a penalty. And employers with more than 50 employees are required
to either provide health insurance to their workers or pay a penalty --
again, because they shouldn’t just dump off those costs onto the rest of
us. Everybody has got some responsibilities.
Now, it is also true that some Americans who have health
insurance plans that they bought on their own through the old individual
market are getting notices from their insurance companies suggesting
that somehow, because of the Affordable Care Act, they may be losing
their existing health insurance plan. This has been the latest flurry
in the news. Because there's been a lot of confusion and misinformation
about this, I want to explain just what's going on.
One of the things health reform was designed to do was to
help not only the uninsured, but also the underinsured. And there are a
number of Americans –- fewer than 5 percent of Americans -– who've got
cut-rate plans that don’t offer real financial protection in the event
of a serious illness or an accident. Remember, before the Affordable
Care Act, these bad-apple insurers had free rein every single year to
limit the care that you received, or use minor preexisting conditions to
jack up your premiums or bill you into bankruptcy. So a lot of people
thought they were buying coverage, and it turned out not to be so good.
Before the Affordable Care Act, the worst of these plans
routinely dropped thousands of Americans every single year. And on
average, premiums for folks who stayed in their plans for more than a
year shot up about 15 percent a year. This wasn’t just bad for those
folks who had these policies, it was bad for all of us -- because,
again, when tragedy strikes and folks can’t pay their medical bills,
everybody else picks up the tab.
Now, if you had one of these substandard plans before the
Affordable Care Act became law and you really liked that plan, you’re
able to keep it. That’s what I said when I was running for office.
That was part of the promise we made. But ever since the law was
passed, if insurers decided to downgrade or cancel these substandard
plans, what we said under the law is you've got to replace them with
quality, comprehensive coverage -- because that, too, was a central
premise of the Affordable Care Act from the very beginning.
And today, that promise means that every plan in the
marketplace covers a core set of minimum benefits, like maternity care,
and preventive care, and mental health care, and prescription drug
benefits, and hospitalization. And they can’t use allergies or
pregnancy or a sports injury or the fact that you're a woman to charge
you more. They can't do that anymore. (Applause.) They can't do that
anymore.
If you couldn’t afford coverage because your child had
asthma, well, he’s now covered. If you’re one of the 45 million
Americans with a mental illness, you’re now covered. If you’re a young
couple expecting a baby, you’re covered. You’re safer. The system is
more secure for you and it’s more secure for everybody.
So if you’re getting one of these letters, just shop
around in the new marketplace. That’s what it’s for. Because of the
tax credits we’re offering, and the competition --
PROTESTOR: Mr. President, ban the Keystone Pipeline! For our generation, you need to do this!
THE PRESIDENT: Because of the tax credits that we’re
offering and the competition between insurers, most people are going to
be able to get better, comprehensive health care plans for the same
price or even cheaper than projected. You’re going to get a better
deal.
Now, there’s a fraction of Americans with higher incomes
who will pay more on the front end for better insurance with better
benefits and protections like the Patient’s Bill of Rights. And that
will actually save them from financial ruin if they get sick. But
nobody is losing their right to health care coverage. And no insurance
company will ever be able to deny you coverage, or drop you as a
customer altogether. Those days are over. And that’s the truth.
(Applause.) That is the truth.
So for people without health insurance, they’re finally
going to be able to get it. For the vast majority of people who have
health insurance that works, you can keep it. For the fewer than 5
percent of Americans who buy insurance on your own, you will be getting a
better deal.
So anyone peddling the notion that insurers are cancelling
people’s plan without mentioning that almost all the insurers are
encouraging people to join better plans with the same carrier, and
stronger benefits and stronger protections, while others will be able to
get better plans with new carriers through the marketplace, and that
many will get new help to pay for these better plans and make them
actually cheaper -- if you leave that stuff out, you’re being grossly
misleading, to say the least. (Applause.)
But, frankly, look, you saw this in Massachusetts -- this
is one of the challenges of health care form. Health care is
complicated and it’s very personal, and it’s easy to scare folks. And
it’s no surprise that some of the same folks trying to scare people now
are the same folks who’ve been trying to sink the Affordable Care Act
from the beginning. (Applause.) And frankly, I don’t understand it.
Providing people with health care, that should be a no-brainer.
(Applause.) Giving people a chance to get health care should be a
no-brainer. (Applause.)
And I’ve said before, if folks had actually good ideas,
better ideas than what’s happening in Massachusetts or what we’ve
proposed for providing people with health insurance, I’d be happy to
listen. But that’s not what’s happening. And anyone defending the
remnants of the old, broken system as if it was working for people,
anybody who thinks we shouldn’t finish the job of making the health care
system work for everybody -– especially when these folks offer no plan
for the uninsured or the underinsured, or folks who lose their insurance
each year -- those folks should have to explain themselves.
(Applause.)
Because I don’t think we should go back to discriminating
against kids with preexisting conditions. (Applause.) I don’t think we
should go back to dropping coverage for people when they get sick, or
because they make a mistake on their application. (Applause.) I don’t
think we should go back to the daily cruelties and indignities and
constant insecurity of a broken health care system. And I’m confident
most Americans agree with me. (Applause.)
So, yes, this is hard, because the health care system is a
big system, and it’s complicated. And if it was hard doing it just in
one state, it's harder to do it in all 50 states -- especially when the
governors of a bunch of states and half of the Congress aren't trying to
help. Yes, it's hard. But it's worth it. (Applause.) It is the
right thing to do, and we're going to keep moving forward. (Applause.)
We are going to keep working to improve the law, just like you did here
in Massachusetts. (Applause.)
We are just going to keep on working at it. We're going
to grind it out, just like you did here in Massachusetts -- and, by the
way, just like we did when the prescription drug program for seniors
known as Medicare Part D was passed by a Republican President a decade
ago. That health care law had some early challenges as well. There
were even problems with the website. (Laughter.) And Democrats weren’t
happy with a lot of the aspects of the law because, in part, it added
hundreds of billions of dollars to the deficit, it wasn't paid for --
unlike the Affordable Care Act, which will actually help lower the
deficit. (Applause.)
But, you know what, once it was the law, everybody pitched
in to try to make it work. Democrats weren’t about to punish millions
of seniors just to try to make a point or settle a score. So Democrats
worked with Republicans to make it work. And I'm proud of Democrats for
having done that. It was the right thing to do. (Applause.) Because
now, about 90 percent of seniors like what they have. They've gotten a
better deal.
Both parties working together to get the job done –-
that’s what we need in Washington right now. (Applause.) That's what
we need in Washington right now.
You know, if Republicans in Congress were as eager to help
Americans get covered as some Republican governors have shown
themselves to be, we'd make a lot of progress. I'm not asking them to
agree with me on everything, but if they’d work with us like Mitt Romney
did, working with Democrats in Massachusetts, or like Ted Kennedy often
did with Republicans in Congress, including on the prescription drug
bill, we’d be a lot further along. (Applause.)
So the point is, we may have political disagreements -- we
do, deep ones. In some cases, we've got fundamentally different
visions about where we should take the country. But the people who
elect us to serve, they shouldn’t pay the price for those
disagreements. Most Americans don’t see things through a political lens
or an ideological lens. This debate has never been about right or
left. It’s been about the helplessness that a parent feels when she
can’t cover a sick child, or the impossible choices a small business
faces between covering his employees or keeping his doors open.
I want to give you just -- I want to close with an
example. A person named Alan Schaeffer, from Prattsburgh, New York, and
he's got a story to tell about sacrifice, about giving up his own health
care to save the woman he loves. So Alan wrote to me last week, and he
told me his story.
Four years ago, his wife, Jan, who happens to be a nurse,
was struck with cancer, and she had to stop working. And then halfway
through her chemo, her employer dropped coverage for both of them. And
Alan is self-employed; he's got an antique business. So he had to make
sure his wife had coverage, obviously, in the middle of cancer
treatments, so he went without insurance.
Now, the great news is, today, Jan is cancer-free. She's
on Medicare, but Alan’s been uninsured ever since. Until last week --
(applause) -- when he sat down at a computer and -- I'm sure after
multiple tries -- (laughter) -- signed up for a new plan under the
Affordable Care Act, coverage that can never be taken away if he gets
sick. (Applause.)
So I just want to read you what he said in this letter.
He says, “I’ve got to tell you I’ve never been so happy to pay a bill in
my entire life." (Laughter.) "When you don’t have insurance at my
age, [it can] really feel like a time bomb waiting to go off. The sense
of relief from knowing I can live out my days longer and healthier,
that’s just a tremendous weight off my shoulders.”
So two days later, Alan goes over to his buddy Bill’s
house. He sits Bill down, and his wife, Diana, at their computer. And
after several tries -- (laughter) -- Alan helped lift that weight from
their shoulders by helping them to sign up for a new plan also. And
compared to their current plan, it costs less than half as much and
covers more.
See, that's why we committed ourselves to this cause -- for Alan, and Jan; for Bill, Diana.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Annie.
THE PRESIDENT: For Annie. For anyone who wrote letters,
and shared stories, and knocked on doors because they believed what
could happen here in Massachusetts could happen all across the country.
(Applause.) And for them, and for you, we are going to see this
through. (Applause.) We’re going to see this through. (Applause.) We
are going to see this through. (Applause.)
This hall is home to some of the earliest debates over the
nature of our government, the appropriate size, the appropriate role of
government. And those debates continue today, and that’s healthy.
They’re debates about the role of the individual and society, and our
rugged individualism, and our sense of self-reliance, our devotion to
the kind of freedoms whose first shot rang out not far from here. But
they are also debates tempered by a recognition that we’re all in this
together, and that when hardship strikes -- and it could strike any of
us at any moment -- we’re there for one another; and that as a country,
we can accomplish great things that we can't accomplish alone.
(Applause.) We believe that. We believe that. (Applause.)
And those sentiments are expressed in a painting right
here in this very hall: “Liberty and Union, now and forever, one and
inseparable.” That’s the value statement Deval was talking about.
That’s what health care reform is about. That’s what America is about.
We are in this together, and we are going to see it through.
(Applause.)
Thank you. God bless you. God bless the United States of America. (Applause.)
Source : The White House
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