Federal judge in Texas rules entire Obama health-care law is unconstitutional

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The constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act and insurance sold through the HealthCare.gov website had been at issue in the Texas lawsuit.

By Amy Goldstein
December 14 at 9:11 PM
A federal judge in Texas threw a dagger into the Affordable Care Act on Friday night, ruling that the entire health-care law is unconstitutional because of a recent change in federal tax law.

The opinion by U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor overturns all of the sprawling law nationwide.

The ruling came on the eve of the deadline for Americans to sign up for coverage in the federal insurance exchange created under the law.

Since the suit was filed in January, many health-law specialists have viewed its logic as weak but nevertheless have regarded the case as the greatest looming legal threat to the 2010 law, which has been a GOP whipping post ever since and assailed repeatedly in the courts.

A spokeswoman for California Attorney General Xavier Becerra (D), who leads a group of states opposing the lawsuit, said that the Democratic defenders of the law are ready to challenge the ruling in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit.

The Supreme Court upheld the law as constitutional in 2012 and 2015, though the first of those opinions struck down the ACA’s provision that was to expand Medicaid nationwide, letting each state choose instead. No matter how O’Connor ruled, legal experts have been forecasting that the Texas case would be appealed and could well place the law again before the high court, giving its conservative newest member, Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh, a first opportunity to take part.

O’Connor is a conservative judge on the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas. He was appointed by President George W. Bush. O’Connor ruled once before on an issue arising from the ACA, issuing a nationwide injunction two years ago on an Obama administration rule that forbade health-care providers from discriminating based on gender identity.

And in June, the administration took the unusual step of telling the court that it will not defend the ACA against this latest challenge. Typically, the executive branches argues to uphold existing statutes in court cases.

The lawsuit was initiated by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who describes himself as a tea party conservative, with support from 18 GOP counterparts and a governor. The plaintiffs argue that the entire ACA is invalid. They trace their argument to the Supreme Court’s 2012 ruling in which Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. wrote for the majority that the penalty the law created for Americans who do not carry health insurance is constitutional because Congress “does have the power to impose a tax on those without health insurance.”

As part of a tax overhaul a year ago, congressional Republicans pushed through a change in which that ACA penalty will be eliminated, starting in January. The lawsuit argues that, with the enforcement of the insurance requirement gone, there is no longer a tax so the law no longer is constitutional.

“Once the heart of the ACA — the individual mandate — is declared unconstitutional, the remainder of the ACA must also fall,” the lawsuit said.

In his 55-page opinion, O’Connor writes that the individual mandate is unconstitutional, saying that it “can no longer be fairly read as an exercise of Congress’ tax power.”

The judge also concludes that this insurance requirement “is essential to and inseverable from the remainder of the ACA.”

In a court brief and an accompanying letter to congressional leaders, the Justice Department did not go that far. Justice officials contended that, once the insurance mandate’s penalty is gone next month, that move will invalidate the ACA’s consumer protections, such as its ban on charging more or refusing to cover people with preexisting medical conditions. But the administration argued that many other parts of the law could be considered legally distinct and thus can continue.

Just before the brief’s deadline, three Justice attorneys involved with the case withdrew from it.

In the letter to Congress, then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions said that Justice was taking this position “with the approval of the president of the United States.” President Trump has vowed since his campaign to dismantle the law, a main domestic achievement of his predecessor, and the administration has been taking steps on its own to foster alternative insurance that tends to be less expensive because it skirts ACA requirements.

The lawsuit has been opposed by a coalition of 17 Democratic attorneys general, led by California’s Becerra, a former congressman. The Democrats contend that while the Republican tax law will eliminate the federal penalty for being uninsured, it does not negate the ACA’s constitutionality.

“Today’s misguided ruling will not deter us. Our coalition will continue to fight in court for the health and well being for all Americans,” Becerra said in a statement after the ruling Friday.

During oral arguments in September, O’Connor asked more pointed questions of the Democratic attorneys general than of the Republicans.

The midterm elections last month have altered the political map in the case. In Wisconsin, an incoming Democratic attorney general, Josh Kaul, campaigned on a promise to withdraw the state from the lawsuit, but Wisconsin’s Republican legislature and outgoing Gov. Scott Walker (R) have tried in a lame-duck session to block his ability to do that. In Maine, outgoing Gov. Paul LePage (R) joined the lawsuit, but the state attorney general’s office told the court last month that the governor did not have power to do so on his own.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/nati...ory.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.c805e257f775
 
The Affordable Care Act could be headed back to the Supreme Court for the third time after a federal judge in Texas ruled Friday that the law is unconstitutional.

Judge Reed O’Connor of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas issued the opinion in a lawsuit brought in February by Republican officials in 20 states led by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. Those officials contended that the entire law should be stricken because Congress earlier this year repealed the fines known as “shared responsibility payments” that people without health coverage had to pay under the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate. O’Connor agreed.

“The court finds the individual mandate can no longer be fairly read as an exercise of Congress’s tax power and is still impermissible under the interstate commerce clause ― meaning the individual mandate is unconstitutional…. [T]he court finds the individual mandate is essential to and inseverable from the remainder of the ACA,” O’Connor wrote in his opinion.

If the ruling stands, the Affordable Care Act’s insurance regulations would disappear and, along with them, the health coverage for millions of people who gained private insurance or Medicaid coverage under the 2010 law signed by President Barack Obama. Specifically, the law’s guarantee of coverage for people regardless of their pre-existing conditions, financial assistance for private insurance, rules establishing a basic minimum set of benefits insurance policies must cover and more would vanish. Since O’Connor’s ruling throws out the entire statute, the rest of the ACA, such as its expansion of Medicaid to low-income adults, also is stricken.

In short, this ruling would deal severe damage to the American health care system. It also would eradicate one of Obama’s most significant accomplishments. According to an analysis by the Urban Institute, eliminating the Affordable Care Act would increase the national uninsured rate by 50 percent and lead to more than 17 million people losing health coverage.

President Donald Trump celebrated the ruling in a pair of Twitter posts Friday night. “As I predicted all along, Obamacare has been struck down as an UNCONSTITUTIONAL disaster! Now Congress must pass a STRONG law that provides GREAT healthcare and protects pre-existing conditions,” he wrote in one post. In another Trump wrote, “Great news for America!”




O’Connor’s ruling does not include a stay to delay it from taking effect, so the Affordable Care Act is now technically unconstitutional. The ruling will be appealed, however, making it unlikely that the law’s health insurance markets, funding and regulations will immediately go away.

“Today’s ruling is an assault on 133 million Americans with preexisting conditions, on the 20 million Americans who rely on the ACA for health care, and on America’s faithful progress toward affordable health care for all Americans,” California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said in a news release. “The ACA has already survived more than 70 unsuccessful repeal attempts and withstood scrutiny in the Supreme Court. Today’s misguided ruling will not deter us: Our coalition will continue to fight in court for the health and wellbeing of all Americans.” Becerra led the team of Democratic state attorneys general who defended the Affordable Care Act in the case.


“The question of constitutionality is straightforward: Is the individual mandate a constitutional exercise of Congress’s enumerated powers when the shared-responsibility payment is zero?” O’Connor wrote. “Because the Supreme Court upheld the individual mandate under Congress’s tax power, the Court will begin there before proceeding to an interstate commerce clause analysis. The court finds that both plain text and Supreme Court precedent dictate that the individual mandate is unconstitutional under either provision.”



Liberal and conservative legal scholars alike mostly dismissed the lawsuit, known as Texas v. Azar, as unserious and unsound, making O’Connor’s ruling somewhat surprising. AARP, along with the American Medical Association, the American Hospital Association, America’s Health Insurance Plans and other health care groups opposed the suit. So did a bipartisan group of nine governors.




During oral arguments in September from the GOP officials, the U.S. Justice Department and lawyers for a group of Democratic officials from 16 states and the District of Columbia, O’Connor appeared to side with the plaintiffs. President George W. Bush nominated O’Connor to the court in 2007.

The plaintiffs’ case was based on an interpretation of the Supreme Court ruling that upheld the individual mandate as constitutional in 2012 and the Obama administration’s arguments that the policy shouldn’t be struck down.

Obama’s Justice Department maintained that the mandate went hand-in-hand with the rules protecting people with pre-existing conditions and the insurance subsidies the law provides, and that the mandate could not be eliminated without scrapping the entire law. Chief Justice John Roberts based his majority opinion on the case in part on this line of reasoning when he wrote that the mandate is constitutional as part of Congress’ power to tax.

Congress eliminated the individual mandate’s penalties as part of the tax law President Donald Trump enacted earlier this year. Because there are no longer tax penalties associated with the Affordable Care Act and because the Obama administration argued the entire law must stand or fall on that basis, the GOP officials argued Roberts’ ruling no longer protects the law.

O’Connor found this persuasive, which he appeared to indicate during oral arguments. He cited the Roberts ruling, the Obama administration’s defense in the 2012 lawsuit and his interpretation of congressional intent when lawmakers passed the ACA in 2010 and when they repealed the mandate fines this year.

The Democratic state attorneys general defending the case argued, in effect, that congressional intent in 2010 doesn’t matter because Congress revisited the issue in 2017, when it passed the tax bill eliminating the mandate penalties. Congress understood very well that it would affect the health care law ― the issue was part of the debate ― and decided to do so anyway, the attorneys general said.

A wide variety of experts, including many critical of the Affordable Care Act in the past, found that line of argument persuasive. O’Connor did not. He said that it was a “fool’s errand” to consider what Congress did in 2017, because that was a debate about a tax bill, not the health care bill itself.

Trump’s Justice Department refused to defend the law in court in defiance of the federal government’s normal practice when a federal statute is challenged. Instead, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and his department argued that the court should eliminate only the provisions of the Affordable Care Act that protect people with pre-existing conditions. The Justice Department also asked the judge to delay the effectiveness of the ruling until after the close of this year’s open enrollment period on the health insurance exchanges, which ends Saturday.

The Trump administration official who oversees the exchanges confirmed Friday night that the federal government will continue to enforce the Affordable Care Act while O’Connor’s ruling is being appealed. “The recent federal court decision is still moving through the courts, and the exchanges are still open for business and we will continue with open enrollment. There is no impact to current coverage or coverage in a 2019 plan,” Seema Verma, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, wrote on Twitter.

Three career Justice Department attorneys removed themselves from the case shortly before the department took this position. Days later, a veteran Justice lawyer actually resigned, although he did not specify that this case was the reason why.

Because the federal government declined to defend its own law, O’Connor permitted Becerra and the other Democrats to argue on behalf of the Affordable Care Act instead. These officials emphasized that if Congress had wanted to repeal the entire law, it would have done so, but legislators merely did away with the mandate penalties.

Republican officials from Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, West Virginia and Wisconsin filed the lawsuit.

Democratic officials from California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and the District of Columbia defended the law.
 
I didn't like the individual mandate but everything else was good. I thought they had already stopped the individual mandate:confused:
 
Federal Judge In Texas Rules Against Obamacare
The decision that the Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional comes in a case brought by 20 Republican state officials and backed by Trump.

.

The Affordable Care Act could be headed back to the Supreme Court for the third time after a federal judge in Texas ruled Friday that the law is unconstitutional.

Judge Reed O’Connor of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas issued the opinion in a lawsuit brought in February by Republican officials in 20 states led by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. Those officials contended that the entire law should be stricken because Congress earlier this year repealed the fines known as “shared responsibility payments” that people without health coverage had to pay under the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate. O’Connor agreed.

“The court finds the individual mandate can no longer be fairly read as an exercise of Congress’s tax power and is still impermissible under the interstate commerce clause ― meaning the individual mandate is unconstitutional…. [T]he court finds the individual mandate is essential to and inseverable from the remainder of the ACA,” O’Connor wrote in his opinion.

If the ruling stands, the Affordable Care Act’s insurance regulations would disappear and, along with them, the health coverage for millions of people who gained private insurance or Medicaid coverage under the 2010 law signed by President Barack Obama. Specifically, the law’s guarantee of coverage for people regardless of their pre-existing conditions, financial assistance for private insurance, rules establishing a basic minimum set of benefits insurance policies must cover and more would vanish. Since O’Connor’s ruling throws out the entire statute, the rest of the ACA, such as its expansion of Medicaid to low-income adults, also is stricken.

In short, this ruling would deal severe damage to the American health care system. It also would eradicate one of Obama’s most significant accomplishments. According to an analysis by the Urban Institute, eliminating the Affordable Care Act would increase the national uninsured rate by 50 percent and lead to more than 17 million people losing health coverage.

President Donald Trump celebrated the ruling in a pair of Twitter posts Friday night. “As I predicted all along, Obamacare has been struck down as an UNCONSTITUTIONAL disaster! Now Congress must pass a STRONG law that provides GREAT healthcare and protects pre-existing conditions,” he wrote in one post. In another Trump wrote, “Great news for America!”



O’Connor’s ruling does not include a stay to delay it from taking effect, so the Affordable Care Act is now technically unconstitutional. The ruling will be appealed, however, making it unlikely that the law’s health insurance markets, funding and regulations will immediately go away.

“Today’s ruling is an assault on 133 million Americans with preexisting conditions, on the 20 million Americans who rely on the ACA for health care, and on America’s faithful progress toward affordable health care for all Americans,” California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said in a news release. “The ACA has already survived more than 70 unsuccessful repeal attempts and withstood scrutiny in the Supreme Court. Today’s misguided ruling will not deter us: Our coalition will continue to fight in court for the health and wellbeing of all Americans.” Becerra led the team of Democratic state attorneys general who defended the Affordable Care Act in the case.

5c146610260000030584f567.jpeg

RICH PEDRONCELLI/ASSOCIATED PRESS
California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said, “Today’s misguided ruling will not deter us: Our coalition will continue to fight in court for the health and wellbeing of all Americans.”



“The question of constitutionality is straightforward: Is the individual mandate a constitutional exercise of Congress’s enumerated powers when the shared-responsibility payment is zero?” O’Connor wrote. “Because the Supreme Court upheld the individual mandate under Congress’s tax power, the Court will begin there before proceeding to an interstate commerce clause analysis. The court finds that both plain text and Supreme Court precedent dictate that the individual mandate is unconstitutional under either provision.”

Liberal and conservative legal scholars alike mostly dismissed the lawsuit, known as Texas v. Azar, as unserious and unsound, making O’Connor’s ruling somewhat surprising. AARP, along with the American Medical Association, the American Hospital Association, America’s Health Insurance Plans and other health care groups opposed the suit. So did a bipartisan group of nine governors.

During oral arguments in September from the GOP officials, the U.S. Justice Department and lawyers for a group of Democratic officials from 16 states and the District of Columbia, O’Connor appeared to side with the plaintiffs. President George W. Bush nominated O’Connor to the court in 2007.

The plaintiffs’ case was based on an interpretation of the Supreme Court ruling that upheld the individual mandate as constitutional in 2012 and the Obama administration’s arguments that the policy shouldn’t be struck down.

Obama’s Justice Department maintained that the mandate went hand-in-hand with the rules protecting people with pre-existing conditions and the insurance subsidies the law provides, and that the mandate could not be eliminated without scrapping the entire law. Chief Justice John Roberts based his majority opinion on the case in part on this line of reasoning when he wrote that the mandate is constitutional as part of Congress’ power to tax.

Congress eliminated the individual mandate’s penalties as part of the tax law President Donald Trump enacted earlier this year. Because there are no longer tax penalties associated with the Affordable Care Act and because the Obama administration argued the entire law must stand or fall on that basis, the GOP officials argued Roberts’ ruling no longer protects the law.

O’Connor found this persuasive, which he appeared to indicate during oral arguments. He cited the Roberts ruling, the Obama administration’s defense in the 2012 lawsuit and his interpretation of congressional intent when lawmakers passed the ACA in 2010 and when they repealed the mandate fines this year.

The Democratic state attorneys general defending the case argued, in effect, that congressional intent in 2010 doesn’t matter because Congress revisited the issue in 2017, when it passed the tax bill eliminating the mandate penalties. Congress understood very well that it would affect the health care law ― the issue was part of the debate ― and decided to do so anyway, the attorneys general said.

A wide variety of experts, including many critical of the Affordable Care Act in the past, found that line of argument persuasive. O’Connor did not. He said that it was a “fool’s errand” to consider what Congress did in 2017, because that was a debate about a tax bill, not the health care bill itself.

Trump’s Justice Department refused to defend the law in court in defiance of the federal government’s normal practice when a federal statute is challenged. Instead, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and his department argued that the court should eliminate only the provisions of the Affordable Care Act that protect people with pre-existing conditions. The Justice Department also asked the judge to delay the effectiveness of the ruling until after the close of this year’s open enrollment period on the health insurance exchanges, which ends Saturday.

The Trump administration official who oversees the exchanges confirmed Friday night that the federal government will continue to enforce the Affordable Care Act while O’Connor’s ruling is being appealed. “The recent federal court decision is still moving through the courts, and the exchanges are still open for business and we will continue with open enrollment. There is no impact to current coverage or coverage in a 2019 plan,” Seema Verma, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, wrote on Twitter.

Three career Justice Department attorneys removed themselves from the case shortly before the department took this position. Days later, a veteran Justice lawyer actually resigned, although he did not specify that this case was the reason why.

Because the federal government declined to defend its own law, O’Connor permitted Becerra and the other Democrats to argue on behalf of the Affordable Care Act instead. These officials emphasized that if Congress had wanted to repeal the entire law, it would have done so, but legislators merely did away with the mandate penalties.

Republican officials from Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, West Virginia and Wisconsin filed the lawsuit.

Democratic officials from California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and the District of Columbia defended the law.

Jonathan Cohn contributed to this article.

This article has been republished with comment from President Trump.
 
See Republicans are hardheaded :smh: this is one of the reasons why they lost the house by a lot of seats. If the supreme court follows through with this federal judge the republicans are not going to win anything in 2020.
 
Judge is a Bush appointee... It's to be expected.

You'd think it'll get changed at the SCOTUS level, but I doubt it... Let them eat themselves I don't give a fuck at this point.
 
Employer provided healthcare is not enough, the U.S. needs a more robust social disability system. Any serious illness will cripple your ability to work. The system we have now is horrendous.

I think it is still a tax without even without the individual mandate. I know the government under Medicare or Medicaid which is funded by a payroll taxes used private insurance. What is the difference between this and just making you buy a policy? You can choose not to pay the tax now and the government does not have to provide the service.

I know under Social Security you can choose not to pay into the system which reduces the benefits that is provided.
 
After seeing how it was implemented, the lack of efforts to deal with housing, and extravagant military spending, Obamacare was designed to waste the resources of government on healthcare rather than providing a robust housing program that would increase integration in schools. This ruling is really a Brown V Board decision blocking this racist law from being implemented.

I would provide income based tax credits and let the free market come up with ways to deal with pre existing conditions. I can think of a couple of ways it could be done.
 
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gotdam fo real tho.. I much fuck time and money are the fuckin goppers gonna waste on this shit..

is someone keepin count.. all this shit means nothing...

what the fuck does this mean... "obamacare" is gonna have to cease untill they work it out...

FALSE...


"Obamacare" is still in full effect...this why I cant take this bullshit seriously.. too much running in circles.. no progression..
 


It wouldn't have been ruled unconstitutional if they wouldn't have taken out the tax payer penalty in their efforts to hobble it …. :hmm:

7
 
See Republicans are hardheaded :smh: this is one of the reasons why they lost the house by a lot of seats. If the supreme court follows through with this federal judge the republicans are not going to win anything in 2020.
They will just get voted back in after the Democrats fix everything.
 
Taxpayer penalty was the biggest flaw. Nobody should have to choose between health and housing.
Single payer system is better.
 
The issue is healthcare is for profit. Take that out and healthcare in the US will be fixed immediately
......
 
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