WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court on Thursday upheld most of President
Obama’s health care overhaul law, saying it was authorized by Congress’s
power to levy taxes. The vote was 5 to 4, with Chief
Justice John G.
Roberts Jr. joining the court’s four more liberal members.
The decision was a victory for President Obama and Congressional Democrats, affirming the central legislative pillar of Mr. Obama’s presidency. The ruling upheld the individual mandate requiring nearly all Americans to obtain health insurance or pay a penalty.
The decision was a victory for President Obama and Congressional Democrats, affirming the central legislative pillar of Mr. Obama’s presidency. The ruling upheld the individual mandate requiring nearly all Americans to obtain health insurance or pay a penalty.
“The Affordable Care Act’s requirement that certain individuals pay a
financial penalty for not obtaining health insurance may reasonably be
characterized as a tax,” Chief Justice Roberts wrote in the majority
opinion. “Because the Constitution permits such a tax, it is not our
role to forbid it, or to pass upon its wisdom or fairness.”
The justices rejected the argument that the administration had pressed
most vigorously in support of the law, that its individual mandate was
justified by Congress’s power to regulate interstate commerce. The vote
was again 5 to 4, but here Chief Justice Roberts was joined by the
court’s four more conservative members.
The court did substantially limit a major piece of the law, one that
expanded Medicaid, the joint federal-state program that provides health
care to poor and disabled people. Seven justices agreed that Congress
had exceeded its constitutional authority by coercing states into
participating in the expansion by threatening them with the loss of
existing federal payments.
Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, frequently the swing vote, joined three more
conservative members in an unusual jointly written dissent. He read
from the bench that the minority viewed the law as “invalid in its
entirety” and that the court’s intrepretation “amounts to a vast
judicial overreaching.”
The court’s ruling, seen as one of the most significant in decades, is a
crucial milestone for the law, allowing almost all of its far-reaching
changes to roll forward. Several of its notable provisions have already
been put in place in the past two years, and more are imminent.
Ultimately, it is intended to end the United States’ status as the only
rich country with large numbers of uninsured people, by expanding both
the private market and Medicaid.
President Obama spoke from the White House shortly after the decision
was handed down. “Whatever the politics, today’s decision was a victory
for people all over this country whose lives are more secure because of
this law,” he said.
Republicans, who have made repeal of the law a priority, once again bashed the measure.
“Obamacare was bad policy yesterday; it’s bad policy today,” said Mitt
Romney, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, in remarks
before the Capitol building. “Obamacare was bad law yesterday; it’s bad
law today.”
Although many conservatives were stung that the law will stand, the
court’s ruling did have the potential to restrain Congress in the longer
term. The restriction of the Medicaid expansion could limit the federal
government’s ability to alter other federally financed state programs.
The commerce clause ruling revised the constitutional structure, handing
a victory to conservative legal scholars who say Congress’s power to
regulate interstate commerce must have defined limits. New challenges to
federal laws on commerce clause grounds are likely to follow.
In the opinion, Chief Justice Roberts wrote that the decision offers no
endorsement of the law’s wisdom, and that letting it survive reflects “a
general reticence to invalidate the acts of the nation’s elected
leaders.”
“It is not our job to protect the people from the consequences of their political choices,” he wrote.
The law was challenged by 26 states, with the individual mandate the most contested issue.
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