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Topic: Clearly Constitutional
Fanta46's photo
Thu 02/03/11 11:19 PM
A Primer on the Constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act


Nearly three dozen judges have now considered challenges to the landmark Affordable Care Act and the overwhelming majority of these cases have been dismissed. Nevertheless, a single outlier judge in Virginia has embraced the meritless arguments against the new health care law and another judge in Florida also appears poised to break with the overwhelming consensus of his colleagues.

With only a few exceptions, these lawsuits principally challenge the Affordable Care Act’s minimum coverage provision—the provision requiring most Americans to either carry health insurance or pay slightly more income taxes—falsely arguing that Congress lacks the constitutional authority to enact such a provision. It is true that Congress’s authority is limited to an itemized list of powers contained in the text of the Constitution itself, but while Congress’s powers are not unlimited, they are still quite sweeping. There is no doubt that the Affordable Care Act fits within these enumerated powers in three ways, as this issue brief will demonstrate.

Congress has broad power to regulate the national economy
A provision of the Constitution known as the “commerce clause” gives Congress power to “regulate commerce … among the several states.” And there is a long line of Supreme Court decisions holding that Congress has broad power to enact laws that substantially affect prices, marketplaces, or other economic transactions. Because health care comprises approximately 17 percent of the national economy, it is impossible to argue that a bill regulating the national health care market does not fit within Congress’s power to regulate commerce.

Nevertheless, opponents of the Affordable Care Act claim that a person who does not buy health insurance is not engaged in any economic “activity” and therefore cannot be compelled to perform an undesired act. Even if these opponents were correct that the uninsured are not active participants in the health care market— and they are active, of course, every time they become ill and seek medical care—nothing in the Constitution supports this novel theory. Indeed, this theory appears to have been invented solely for the purpose of this litigation. Congress has enacted countless laws which would be forbidden under this extra-constitutional theory:

■Guns: President George Washington signed a law that required much of the country to purchase a firearm, ammunition, and other equipment in case they needed to be called up for militia service. Many of the members of Congress who voted for this mandate were members of the Philadelphia Convention that wrote the Constitution.
■Civil rights: The Civil Rights Act of 1964 compelled business owners to engage in transactions they considered undesirable—hiring and otherwise doing business with African Americans.
■Insurance mandates: The Affordable Care Act is not even the only federal law requiring someone to carry insurance. The Price-Anderson Act of 1957 requires nuclear power plants to purchase liability insurance and the Flood Disaster Protection Act requires many homeowners to carry flood insurance.
■Other mandates: Other laws require individuals to perform jury service, file tax returns, and register for selective service.
The minimum coverage provision is the keystone that holds the Affordable Care Act together
The Constitution also gives Congress the power “[t]o make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution” its power to regulate interstate commerce. As Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia explains, this means that “where Congress has the authority to enact a regulation of interstate commerce, it possesses every power needed to make that regulation effective.”

The act eliminates one of the insurance industry’s most abusive practices—denying coverage to patients with pre-existing conditions. This ban cannot function if patients are free to enter and exit the insurance market at will. If patients can wait until they get sick to buy insurance, they will drain all the money out of an insurance plan that they have not previously paid into, leaving nothing left for the rest of the plan’s consumers.

Seven states enacted a pre-existing conditions law without also passing an insurance coverage requirement, and all seven states saw health insurance premiums spiral out of control. In some of these states, the individual insurance market collapsed.There is a way out of this trap, however. Massachusetts enacted a minimum coverage provision in 2006 to go along with its pre-existing conditions provision and the results were both striking and immediate. Massachusetts’ premiums rapidly dropped by 40 percent.

In other words, because the only way to make the pre-existing conditions law effective is to also require individuals to carry insurance, that requirement easily passes Scalia’s test.

The link between the minimum coverage provision and the Affordable Care Act’s insurance regulations also sets this law aside from other hypothetical laws requiring individuals to purchase other goods or services. The national market for vegetables will not collapse if Congress does not require people to purchase broccoli, nor will Americans cease to be able to obtain automobiles absent a law requiring the purchase of cars from General Motors. Accordingly, a court decision upholding the Affordable Care Act would not provide a precedent enabling Congress to compel all Americans to purchase broccoli or cars, despite the law’s opponents’ claims to the contrary.

Congress has broad leeway in how it raises money
Congress also has the authority to “lay and collect taxes” under the Constitution. This power to tax also supports the minimum coverage provision, which works by requiring individuals who do not carry health insurance to pay slightly more income taxes. Taxpayers who refuse insurance must pay more in taxes while those who do carry insurance are exempt from this new tax. For this reason, the law is no different than dozens of longstanding tax exemptions, including the mortgage interest tax deduction, which allows people who take out home mortgages to pay lower taxes than people who do not.

Opponents of the Affordable Care Act respond that the minimum coverage provision somehow ceases to be a tax because the new law does not use the word “tax” to describe it, but this distinction is utterly meaningless. Nothing in the Constitution requires Congress to use certain magic words to invoke its enumerated powers. And no precedent exists suggesting that a fully valid law somehow ceases to be constitutional because Congress gave it the wrong name.

http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2011/01/clearly_constitutional.html

lilott's photo
Thu 02/03/11 11:38 PM
I don't have insurance and when I go to the doctor or hospital I pay out of pocket.

actionlynx's photo
Fri 02/04/11 01:03 AM
Three words:

Free Market Economy

That's what the Constitution was written in the intention of supporting. That's also why the Commerce Clause uses the word "regulate". We are getting further and further from it. It has to end somewhere. I say we start by "regulating" insurance companies rather than forcing citizens to purchase insurance.


actionlynx's photo
Fri 02/04/11 01:09 AM
Also, the gun mandate is your only example NOT from the 20th century or later. That mandate was put into effect when the U.S. lacked a sizable standing army and not long after the Revolutionary War. It was meant for the defense of the country under the militia system which the Constitution itself mandated. That later changed during the Civil War because militias lacked adequate training, discipline, conditioning, and leadership for a large-scale war.

no photo
Fri 02/04/11 01:25 AM
I want a Fanta without the bimbos. Just sayin'!!!

Fanta46's photo
Fri 02/04/11 07:08 AM

I don't have insurance and when I go to the doctor or hospital I pay out of pocket.


Thank whoever you thank that you've had no real medical issues.

I have, and the costs would have brought you to near bankruptcy. If what you say is true.
Anyone that filthy rich is the exception, not the norm.
Such a comment just shows a sense of inhumanity and self centeredness that seems to run rampant with Republican followers.

Fanta46's photo
Fri 02/04/11 07:08 AM

I want a Fanta without the bimbos. Just sayin'!!!


waving flowers

AdventureBegins's photo
Fri 02/04/11 07:22 AM
Requiring americans to purchase is not in any way shape or form constitional...

It is an unwarrented expansion of the federal government into the free market system.

No matter who's spin you buy.

This bill gives insurance companies a 'monopoly' by fiat.

Fanta46's photo
Fri 02/04/11 07:52 AM
Edited by Fanta46 on Fri 02/04/11 07:52 AM
Poppycock!


■Guns: President George Washington signed a law that required much of the country to purchase a firearm, ammunition, and other equipment in case they needed to be called up for militia service. Many of the members of Congress who voted for this mandate were members of the Philadelphia Convention that wrote the Constitution.


AdventureBegins's photo
Fri 02/04/11 08:03 AM

Poppycock!


■Guns: President George Washington signed a law that required much of the country to purchase a firearm, ammunition, and other equipment in case they needed to be called up for militia service. Many of the members of Congress who voted for this mandate were members of the Philadelphia Convention that wrote the Constitution.




Much of the country does not mean ALL of the country.

2nd ammendment give some credence to this being allowed...

Please show some law or ammendment that give the federal government the right to require all americans to buy anything.

(wasn't that 'law' referenced above voided in the 1800's?)

no photo
Fri 02/04/11 08:22 AM
The Government does not mandate that anybody buy a house, but you have to buy one if you want to get a mortgage deduction on your income tax. That's an exact analogy.

no photo
Fri 02/04/11 08:25 AM


..so in essence what we are saying is Americans are forced to pay for insurance..and illegal aliens get it for free..and well so does the government 'cause we pay for theirs also..i guess it would be

alot easier for Americans to pay for their healthcare if their 401Ks didn't tank and the government hadn't used social security as a slush fund..not to mention the real estate debacle due to lack of governmental oversight causing many Americans the loss of their wealth in equity..and the rise in unemployment..so where are they to get the money...i know ..we could borrow it from the banks....:laughing:

AdventureBegins's photo
Fri 02/04/11 08:26 AM

The Government does not mandate that anybody buy a house, but you have to buy one if you want to get a mortgage deduction on your income tax. That's an exact analogy.

False analogy.

You can choose not to buy a house. (and the tax system sucks anyway)...

You will not be able to 'CHOOSE' not to buy health insurance.

no photo
Fri 02/04/11 08:43 AM


The Government does not mandate that anybody buy a house, but you have to buy one if you want to get a mortgage deduction on your income tax. That's an exact analogy.

False analogy.

You can choose not to buy a house. (and the tax system sucks anyway)...

You will not be able to 'CHOOSE' not to buy health insurance.
Please document this. I believe you are wrong

Fanta46's photo
Fri 02/04/11 09:12 AM



The Government does not mandate that anybody buy a house, but you have to buy one if you want to get a mortgage deduction on your income tax. That's an exact analogy.

False analogy.

You can choose not to buy a house. (and the tax system sucks anyway)...

You will not be able to 'CHOOSE' not to buy health insurance.
Please document this. I believe you are wrong


You can choose not to buy a house.
You can choose not to purchase health insurance.

In both instances you will be required to pay a higher tax!

Analogy is correct!

Fanta46's photo
Fri 02/04/11 09:13 AM
Edited by Fanta46 on Fri 02/04/11 09:19 AM


■Civil rights: The Civil Rights Act of 1964 compelled business owners to engage in transactions they considered undesirable—hiring and otherwise doing business with African Americans.


Another 20th century example.

no photo
Fri 02/04/11 09:14 AM
Edited by artlo on Fri 02/04/11 09:16 AM
This should make things clear. http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/03/21/us/health-care-reform.html . (last section).
Starting in 2014, most Americans will be required to buy health insurance or pay a penalty.
The penalty will be phased in, starting at $95 or 1 percent of income in 2014, whichever is higher, and rising to $695 or 2.5 percent of income in 2016. But families would not pay more than $2,085.
American Indians don’t have to buy insurance. Those with religious objections or a financial hardship can also avoid the requirement. And if you would pay more than 8 percent of your income for the cheapest available plan, you will not be penalized for failing to buy coverage.
Those who are exempt, or under 30, can buy a policy that only pays for catastrophic medical costs. It must allow for three primary care visits a year as well.
You may or may not consider the $695 to be a tax, although I believe it will be administered through your taxes. That is why this is an exact analogy to the mortgage deduction situation.

Fanta46's photo
Fri 02/04/11 09:17 AM

This should make things clear. http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/03/21/us/health-care-reform.html . (last section).
Starting in 2014, most Americans will be required to buy health insurance or pay a penalty.
The penalty will be phased in, starting at $95 or 1 percent of income in 2014, whichever is higher, and rising to $695 or 2.5 percent of income in 2016. But families would not pay more than $2,085.
American Indians don’t have to buy insurance. Those with religious objections or a financial hardship can also avoid the requirement. And if you would pay more than 8 percent of your income for the cheapest available plan, you will not be penalized for failing to buy coverage.
Those who are exempt, or under 30, can buy a policy that only pays for catastrophic medical costs. It must allow for three primary care visits a year as well.
You may or may not consider the $695 to be a tax, although I believe it will be administered through your taxes. That is why this is an exact analogy to the mortgage deduction situation.


Right!
And if you can't afford it. What happens?

no photo
Fri 02/04/11 09:30 AM
And if you can't afford it. What happens?
Dunno. My guess is that the same tax credits and exemptions that apply to poor people in other cases would apply here. That's OK with me.

The reason it is so hard to wrap your head around is well explained in this Ezra Klein article. ( http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/2010/04/do_the_poor_really_pay_no_taxe.html ) It's not specifically about Health Care, but you get the same idea.

Fanta46's photo
Fri 02/04/11 09:46 AM

And if you can't afford it. What happens?
Dunno. My guess is that the same tax credits and exemptions that apply to poor people in other cases would apply here. That's OK with me.

The reason it is so hard to wrap your head around is well explained in this Ezra Klein article. ( http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/2010/04/do_the_poor_really_pay_no_taxe.html ) It's not specifically about Health Care, but you get the same idea.


What happens,

http://mingle2.com/topic/show/295768

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