did reach out to senator paul, senator mcconnell, and to the republican congressmen who represent lexington, all of them declined to speak about it this week. i got to speak to matt beven who runs a small business and he's running for mitch mcconnell's seat. >> those subsidies for three years are going to cover kentuckians three years and it's being paid for by other taxpayers including those from kentucky. when the subsidies are gone, then it,s increased -- increase in tax. it's a regressive tax on the working poor. that's the primary reason i'm opposed to this. >> now, the rollout has been a little bumpy. it's no secret. as traffic on the sign-up sites has been heavier than expected, that's what we're seeing. the white house said that 4.7 million people went to healthcare.gov in just the first 24 hours. 8:00 a.m. eastern, the doors fling open on the new marketplace, where millions of americans should be able to sign up for health insurance.