Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Health care ruling: A strange constitutional win

Randy Barnett June 28, 2012 | 8:00 pm

Who would have thought we could win our Commerce Clause challenge while the Affordable Care Act is upheld?
Thursday, the Roberts court vindicated all of our arguments about why the individual insurance mandate exceeded the commerce power: "The individual mandate cannot be upheld as an exercise of Congress's power under the Commerce Clause," wrote Chief Justice John Roberts. "That Clause authorizes Congress to regulate interstate commerce, not to order individuals to engage in it." Then the court went further to invalidate the health care law's withholding of existing Medicaid funding as coercive, thereby finding an enforceable limit on the Spending Power.

By rewriting the law to make it a "tax," however, the court has now thrown Obamacare into the political process. The people will decide at the ballot box whether this so-called "tax" will stand.

Just as important, the people will decide whether future Supreme Court nominees will pledge to enforce the Constitution's restrictions on the power of Congress. Regardless of whether Roberts switched his vote in response to the enormous pressure brought to bear on him by President Obama, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and the entire progressive establishment, future nominees to the Supreme Court must be vetted to ensure they have the character to stand against the intense political pressure to uphold unconstitutional acts of Congress.

Though the ultimate disposition of the case was disappointing, today could become a turning point of constitutional law, so long as the public maintains its current level of interest in the constitutional limits on congressional power that have been affirmed by the court. To see why, we need to step back.

In the early 1930s, a Democratic president and Congress were swept into power to do something about an economic catastrophe. Not letting an economic crisis go to waste, they enacted sweeping legislation that greatly expanded the Commerce power of Congress beyond the its constitutional limits as they had been interpreted for 150 years. The court's eventual acquiescence to these new powers have shaped our understanding of federal power ever since.

In 2009, history seemed on its way to repeating. Swept into office during a financial panic, a Democratic president and supermajority Democratic Congress tried using another crisis to achieve the long-standing progressive dream of putting the national government in control of the medical care of all Americans.


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