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Obama winds up closing pitch on health care law

Amid threats of a government shutdown by GOP leaders, the president will address the country Thursday morning to urge uninsured citizens to sign up for health care beginning Oct. 1.
/ Source: MSNBC TV

Amid threats of a government shutdown by GOP leaders, the president will address the country Thursday morning to urge uninsured citizens to sign up for health care beginning Oct. 1.

President Barack Obama, right, waves to members of the audience after speaking at the Clinton Global Initiative with former President Bill Clinton, left, in New York, Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2013. (Photo by Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP)

President Obama will address the country Thursday morning in a final appeal to urge uninsured Americans to sign up for health insurance required under his administration’s landmark health care law.

His remarks comes five days before people can sign up for insurance in the new online marketplaces, a time period that lasts until March 2014. A small fine applies to those who don’t comply with the law.

Obama is expected to discuss the benefits of insurance protections and the opportunity the bill allows for users to comparison-shop among plans, according to a White House official. His goal is to cover the 15% of Americans who live without health insurance. He will speak around 11 a.m. from Prince George’s Community College in Maryland.

Individual insurance premiums are projected to be lower for 95% of Americans, according to a report released Wednesday by the Department of Health and Human Services. The costs are expected to be an average of $328 per month, but will vary by state, family size, and annual income.

GOP leaders have pushed for Congress to defund Obamacare, but the Supreme Court voted last year to uphold the law. The Obama administration has delayed several components of the law including a rule that stipulates businesses with more than 50 employees must provide insurance and a special insurance exchange designed for small businesses.

Some Republican leaders, including Mike Lee of of Utah and Ted Cruz of Texas, recently threatened a government shutdown over the health care law. The Republican-led House last week passed a stop-gap spending bill that will fund the government through Dec. 15, but also stripped funding from the Obama administration’s health care law. The Democrat-controlled Senate is expected to reject that proposal–despite a Sen. Cruz 21-hour fake filibuster–and the White House has said it would veto anything that threatens the health care law.