- Apr 29, 2004
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SCOTUS is set to issue their ruling on the Affordable Care Act tomorrow. I figured we should get a prediction thread going to give us something to argue about until the decision is released.
According to a Washington Post blog, there are a few ways this could unfold.
1) Strike the mandate, leave the penalties. Joey Fishkin of the University of Texas thinks that the Supreme Court could call the mandate unconstitutional while leaving the law functionally unchanged.
2) Strike the mandate, dispute its existence. Walter Dellinger, a former solicitor general in the Clinton White House, suggests that Roberts could say that it would be unconstitutional to force Americans to buy health insurance. Point, conservatives! But the court could also hold that the Affordable Care Act isnt actually forcing anyone to buy health insurance.
3) Punt. This was the solution favored by Judge Brett Kavanaugh, a conservative star on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. He argued that the Anti-Injunction Act specifically barred the court from considering the mandate until the federal government actually begins enforcing it.
4) Reject the Commerce Clause reasoning, but find that the mandate is a tax. A related option for the Supreme Court would be to say that the federal government does not have the power under the Commerce Clause to impose an individual mandate. But it does have broad power under the Constitution to levy taxes. So, writes David Savage in the L.A. Times, the court could find that the mandate is a tax.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...rt-could-split-the-difference-on-health-care/
EDIT: According to CNN ACA has been upheld in its entirety.
http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2012/06/28/how-will-supreme-court-rule-on-health-care-law/?hpt=hp_t1
According to a Washington Post blog, there are a few ways this could unfold.
1) Strike the mandate, leave the penalties. Joey Fishkin of the University of Texas thinks that the Supreme Court could call the mandate unconstitutional while leaving the law functionally unchanged.
2) Strike the mandate, dispute its existence. Walter Dellinger, a former solicitor general in the Clinton White House, suggests that Roberts could say that it would be unconstitutional to force Americans to buy health insurance. Point, conservatives! But the court could also hold that the Affordable Care Act isnt actually forcing anyone to buy health insurance.
3) Punt. This was the solution favored by Judge Brett Kavanaugh, a conservative star on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. He argued that the Anti-Injunction Act specifically barred the court from considering the mandate until the federal government actually begins enforcing it.
4) Reject the Commerce Clause reasoning, but find that the mandate is a tax. A related option for the Supreme Court would be to say that the federal government does not have the power under the Commerce Clause to impose an individual mandate. But it does have broad power under the Constitution to levy taxes. So, writes David Savage in the L.A. Times, the court could find that the mandate is a tax.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...rt-could-split-the-difference-on-health-care/
EDIT: According to CNN ACA has been upheld in its entirety.
http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2012/06/28/how-will-supreme-court-rule-on-health-care-law/?hpt=hp_t1
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