Even Shadow Senator Paul Strauss had a car in the parade. And a classic one, to boot.

It’s healthcare open enrollment season, and compared to the rest of the country, D.C. is faring pretty well in keeping residents covered. The District ranked fourth in a recent WalletHub analysis measuring the highest and lowest health uninsured rates across the country.

Since the launch of Obamacare,10,976 people have signed up for health insurance coverage in the District, taking the city’s rate of uninsured residents down from 7.6 percent in 2010 to 5.28 percent in 2014.

The states with the lowest uninsured rates in 2014 were Massachusetts, Vermont, and Hawaii, in that order.

Florida, Alaska and Texas have the most uninsured people in the county, joining 18 other states with rates higher than the national average of 11.7 percent.

Source: WalletHub

The analysis also highlighted racial and ethnic disparities among D.C.’s uninsured. The uninsured rate for the white population is 88.15 percent lower than that of Hispanics and 61.47 percent lower than that of blacks.

On a brighter note, Obamacare reduced the children’s uninsured rate in D.C. by 9.16 percent and the adult uninsured rate by 31.33 percent between 2010 and 2014.

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, otherwise known as Obamacare, was signed into law in March 2010. Last year, the White House stooped to Buzzfeed-levels of desperation to get millennials to sign up for coverage, employing a March Madness bracket-style vote (through GIFs) on the best reasons to sign up.