Obama Urges Latinos To Sign Up For Insurance Now
President Barack Obama appealed directly to Latinos on Thursday, telling them time is running out to sign up for health coverage this year and that they should enroll now to avoid problems.

Open enrollment in the聽health law’s聽online health insurance marketplaces closes March 31 for coverage this year and that date won鈥檛 be extended, Obama said during a town hall meeting in Washington, D.C. broadcast live聽on several Spanish-speaking media outlets. for coverage in the marketplace are Latino and their enrollment is seen as critical to the law鈥檚 overall success.
The event was hosted by the campaign, also known as 鈥淕et Covered,鈥 a partnership between the California Endowment, , and America鈥檚 largest Spanish-language media organizations, including Univision, Telemundo, and La Opinion-impreMedia.
Noting that he has worked to help many Latinos afford college and stay in their homes during the recession, Obama urged Latinos to trust that he is working for their best interests. 鈥淵ou are not punishing me by not signing up [for聽coverage],鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou are punishing yourself.鈥
He also聽stressed that the information required for sign-ups will not be shared with immigration agencies. 聽鈥淵ou should feel confident 鈥 if someone in your family is eligible, you should have them sign up,鈥 he said.
If聽too many people wait until the last few days of March to enroll, he cautioned that it could create logjams for the federal marketplace,.
Obama said the law is working well, but聽that more states — particularly Florida and Texas — need to expand Medicaid eligibility so that聽 working class people can get coverage for little cost. 聽The Supreme Court upheld the law last year, but made the expansion of the government health program for the poor effectively optional for states. To date, 26 states have approved the expansion.
鈥淚鈥檇 like to change the attitudes of some of the politicians who have been blocking it,鈥 he said.
The law provides full聽funding for the expansion through 2016 to cover everyone under 138 percent of the federal poverty level, or up to about $15,800 for an individual. In later years, 聽states have to pick up some costs but never more than 10 percent.
Obama acknowledged that one of the administration鈥檚聽biggest challenges is convincing healthy people that they should sign up for coverage. 鈥淭he problem with health insurance is people do not want to pay for it until something goes wrong,鈥 he said.
Obama鈥檚 appearance is part of a series of efforts 聽to engage the Latino community. On Wednesday,聽First Lady Michelle Obama visited the Jessie Trice Community Health Center, located in a heavily African American and Latino neighborhood in Miami, to plug enrollment efforts.
The 聽helps fund KHN鈥檚 coverage of the Affordable Care Act in California.