N.J. residents angrily confront MacArthur over health-care bill
At an emotionally charged town-hall meeting in heavily Democratic
MacArthur, who represents parts of
"I recognize there's a lot of anxiety in the country, there's a lot of anger," MacArthur said to jeers. "I represent everybody in this district. ... I want to meet with my constituents and tell you the things that matter to me, the things I'm doing, and why I'm doing them."
By and large, the crowd of about 300 did not like what it heard.
"You have been the single greatest threat to my family in the entire world. You are the reason I stay up at night. You are the reason that I can't sleep," said
He said his wife, Colette, had recovered from breast cancer, but every day, "she thinks about it. Is it coming back? Is it going to kill me?"
"Now she also has to contend with, what if my husband loses his job?"
Ginter said his two children also have preexisting conditions.
At issue was an amendment MacArthur introduced to the House bill that would allow states to obtain waivers to provisions in Obamacare that aim to make insurance affordable for people with preexisting medical conditions and that require insurers to provide for certain "essential" benefits, such as maternity care.
States that obtain such a waiver would be required to create high-risk pools for those with preexisting conditions, but critics and independent analysts have questioned whether the legislation would provide states with enough money to make coverage affordable.
MacArthur's amendment helped push the legislation through the House by winning over conservative members who said it would allow states to opt out of key Obamacare mandates.
"This is something that's very real. This is my life," said
"Without health-care coverage, I'm dead," he said. "And this is your amendment, sir. It's yours. You own it."
MacArthur, a former insurance executive, said, "I am watching an insurance industry collapsing." Premiums and deductibles are increasing in Obamacare's individual market, MacArthur said, with healthy people dropping out and sick people staying in.
"I want to save that market," MacArthur said. "But if we do nothing, insurers will continue to drop out. It cannot survive."
That prompted him to act, he said. MacArthur said that the federally subsidized high-risk pools he proposed would ensure that those with preexisting conditions have coverage and reduce costs for healthy people.
And he emphasized that the House legislation wasn't a total overhaul of Obamacare. "There's a lot of things in the Affordable Care Act we did not touch," he said.
The bill has not advanced in the
The meeting was contentious before it started. In the hours leading up to the event, about a thousand people waited outside, some holding signs like "It's Health Care Not the Hunger Games" and "Trump 'Care' Kills."
"This bill must die!" they chanted. "If you repeal the ACA, in 2018 you'll have to pay!"
As MacArthur tried to tell the story of his daughter Gracie -- who was born with severe health problems and died at age 11 -- members of the audience accused him of politicizing her death.
"Shame on you!" one woman shouted.
"I would say shame on you, right now," MacArthur replied.
The congressman was able to defuse the tension at times during the three-hour meeting, but it was contentious throughout.
Some constituents expressed outrage over Trump's firing of FBI Director
Asked if he supported the appointment of a special prosecutor, MacArthur said the FBI,
One man asked: "When are you going to decide to be an American and not a politician?"
Editor's Note: This story was revised to correct a quote attributed to a woman on
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