Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
The Affordable Care Act is here to stay.
The Affordable Care Act is no longer affordable.
The Affordable Care Act has hurt more people that it's helped.
I bemoaned the pending loss of Obamacare/the Affordable Care Act.
Democrats embrace The Affordable Care Act. We're very proud of it.
The Affordable Care Act is a public-policy flop of epic proportions.
The Affordable Care Act has turned out to be anything but affordable.
I want very much to save what works and is good about the Affordable Care Act.
Hispanics have been among the biggest beneficiaries of the Affordable Care Act.
Like many of you, I was very disappointed at the rollout of the Affordable Care Act.
I don't think it's any secret I've never been an advocate for the Affordable Care Act.
The Affordable Care Act was not affordable. The Affordable Care Act is not affordable.
Congress needs to work in a bipartisan way to fix the Affordable Care Act, not repeal it.
One of the best moments of the Obama presidency was the passage of the Affordable Care Act.
Before the Affordable Care Act, one in five bankruptcies in this state was health care related.
We will see if the situation with the Affordable Care Act ever rights itself or is improved upon.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is the major achievement of President Obama's first term.
We don't need something as large and complex and costly as the Affordable Care Act, because it can't work.
I support the Affordable Care Act and believe we should take steps to further expand coverage and reduce costs.
The Affordable Care Act is not perfect, and I would vote to build on its success while fixing what doesn't work.
We need to build on the progress of the Affordable Care Act, not tear it down in the middle of a global pandemic.
Many Kentuckians are benefiting from it. Even Republican Kentuckians are benefiting from the Affordable Care Act.
In the Senate, I will defend the protections in the Affordable Care Act, and expand health care to more Americans.
The foundations and the intent of the Affordable Care Act are laudable. The way it's being implemented is a disaster.
I ask the American people not to fall victim to disinformation. There are no death panels. The Affordable Care Act cuts the deficit.
The Affordable Care Act has been designed to provide health security by driving competition, lowering premiums, and protecting families.
In Indiana, the Affordable Care Act will raise the average cost of health insurance in the individual market by an unaffordable 72 percent.
President Trump can't vote for me. The people that sent me up here sent me up here to repeal and replace, 100 percent, the Affordable Care Act.
If the minority is able to successfully undo the Affordable Care Act by blackmail, it will be the undoing of the democratic nature of our government.
Thanks to President Barack Obama, under the Affordable Care Act, millions more people will be eligible for health insurance, including many people with HIV.
I think one of the most underreported and untouted benefits of the Affordable Care Act is the real investments we are finally making in this country in prevention.
I can't predict the future. All I know is that if we continue down the path we're on, the Affordable Care Act will implode on itself. People will be without insurance.
We must focus on strengthening the Affordable Care Act in ways that protect families and small businesses, and not on stripping away coverage from the most vulnerable.
Of all the liberal resentments during the Obama years, one of the sharpest has been the failure to secure a public insurance option as part of the Affordable Care Act.
On a mild day in January 2011, Republicans in the House voted to repeal the Affordable Care Act. It was the first of more than 80 attempts to dismantle the landmark law.
The authors of the Affordable Care Act wrongly assumed that new kinds of health plans, engineered in Washington, D.C., would emerge to displace the national for-profit insurers.
The U.S. healthcare industry is undergoing radical transformation with the Affordable Care Act. Evolving thought and business models have little semblance to present mechanisms.
While I support making improvements in the Affordable Care Act, trying to enact them while holding the government and our economic recovery hostage is reckless and irresponsible.
I am not going to wait and have us plunge back into a contentious national debate that has very little chance of succeeding. Let's make the Affordable Care Act work for everybody.
We all understand that the Affordable Care Act is not working perfectly. In fact, any major piece of legislation like this has to be tweaked over time, has to be improved over time.
I voted for the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, not because I thought it was the best we could do, but because I thought it was a whole lot better than the current system.
Thanks to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, preventive care services, including contraception, will be covered by private insurance plans without co-pays or deductibles.
Communities across the nation play an important role in leading the way toward healthier families, and the Affordable Care Act helps make prevention an important priority for every community.
With the implementation of the Affordable Care Act and the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, more people will have insurance coverage and, in principle, be eligible for more care.
When the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the Affordable Care Act, Sarah Palin tweeted, 'Obama lies; freedom dies.' She's referring, I guess, to the freedom to go without health care when you're sick.
We're underscoring to everybody the promise at the heart of the Affordable Care Act, which is quality, affordable health care coverage available in a transparent marketplace for the first time ever.
Sometimes it seems President Obama lives in a parallel universe where facts are floating around to be plucked out of suspended animation. Never more so than on the effects of the Affordable Care Act.
I have people coming to me every day, coming to my office, with life-threatening diseases - life-threatening diseases - and they were dropped from their health care because of the Affordable Care Act.
If the House Republicans want to repeal the Affordable Care Act, they should make their case to the American people and elect a president and a majority in both Houses of Congress prepared to do that.
A lot of the discussion about rolling back the Affordable Care Act is about dismantling the marketplaces where individuals are shopping for their own coverage when they don't get it in their workplace.