from the oval office in the first 100 days an arbitrary stander of a new administration. a legislature does not move with speed, if you are going to try to do something as expensive as health care, we have to remember the affordable care act was not even passed by the senate until december of your two of the obama administration. so try to affect the health care regime is a massive undertaking, we see how abstained the administration is off the bat because of some of the policy feelings. if you are drawing gloom and going to get the tax reform, that is going to take on this. if he hears of some details. then there is infrastructure, this cannot be set up and knocked over like dominoes. it takes time. jon: he did say that he was going to be a change agent in washington coming as it comes with a learning curve, judy. it does take some time to wrap your arms around the enormous powers of the presidency. high marks on the syria
march 23, 2010 at the signing ceremony for the affordable care act, there s the central figure in the picture, much shorter than anyone else. he s marcelas owens. the senator from washington was the first person to tell the story of his life under the hold health care regime. i m going to tell everyone about this little boy. i met him at a health care rally in seattle. he was 10 years old. he and his two sisters have been through a lot. two years ago, his mother, tiffany, who is not in this picture, that s his grandmother, tiffany lost her life because she was not insured. today marcelas lives in
march 23, 2010, at the signing ceremony for the affordable care act, there s the central figure in the picture, much shorter than anyone else. he s marcelas owens. the senator from washington was the first person to tell the story of his life under the hold health care regime. i m going to tell everyone about this little boy. i met him at a health care rally in seattle. he was 10 years old. he and his two sisters have been through a lot. two years ago, his mother, tiffany, who is not in this picture, that s his grandmother, tiffany lost her life because she was not insured. today marcelas lives in seattle with his grandmother. it s my pleasure to welcome marcelas owens and his
like some accident that you ended up at that bill signing. yeah. you were working hard to get universal health care because of the experience that you had had, the tragic experience you had in your own family. what did you learn from that experience of being an activist, of going and talking to members of congress? i learned that that when you work hard with people that are as dedicated as you, that you can make a lot of big changes that a lot of people may have never thought would happen. you lost your daughter to illness. i did. i can t even begin to fathom as a father of a child. what happened and how do you understand the way the old health care regime contributed to the loss of your daughter? what happened was that tiffany basically fell through the cracks of our health care system.
march 23, 2010 at the signing ceremony for the affo affordable care act, there s the central figure in the picture, much shorter than anyone else. he s marcellus owens. the senator from washington was the first person to tell the story of his life under the hold health care regime. i m going to tell everyone about this little boy. i met him at a health care rally in seattle. he was 10 years old. he and his two sisters have been through a lot. two years ago, his mother, tiffany, who is not in this picture, that s his grandmother,