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						 House 
						Democrats target DOJ decision not to defend Obamacare 
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		[November 20, 2018] 
		 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - 
		Democrats will scrutinize the Trump administration's decision not to 
		defend Obamacare in federal court, when Democrats take control of the 
		U.S. House of Representatives next year, a leading Democrat said on 
		Monday. | 
        
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			 In June, the Department of Justice declared the healthcare law's 
			individual mandate unconstitutional in federal court, which 
			threatened to undermine insurance protections for people with 
			preexisting conditions, and helped make healthcare a winning issue 
			for Democrats in House elections on Nov. 6. 
 The decision was also a break with a long-standing executive branch 
			practice of defending existing statutes in court and prompted three 
			Justice Department career attorneys to withdraw from the case. The 
			Affordable Care Act (ACA) known as Obamacare is a favorite target 
			for Republicans, who have repeatedly tried and failed to repeal it.
 
			
			 
			
 Representative Jerrold Nadler, who is expected to become chairman of 
			the House Judiciary Committee in January, said he is concerned about 
			the Justice Department's actions, which took place in a Texas court 
			in response to a lawsuit brought by 20 state attorneys general.
 
 "This committee expects to examine the department's refusal to 
			defend a duly enacted federal statute, the abrupt resignation of 
			veteran department employees and an apparent determination by this 
			administration to undermine affordable healthcare coverage for 
			millions," Nadler said in a letter to acting Attorney General 
			Matthew Whitaker.
 
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			The New York Democrat asked Whitaker to respond by Dec. 31 to two 
			June 2018 letters sent to former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, 
			seeking details about the decision as well as coverage for 
			pre-existing conditions and cost-sharing subsidy payments provided 
			by the ACA.
 Democrats charge the Trump administration sought to use the federal 
			courts to undercut the law.
 
 In the Texas case, the Justice Department said in a legal brief the 
			ACA's individual mandate was made unconstitutional by a provision in 
			the 2017 Republican tax law that eliminated penalties for failing to 
			obtain health insurance.
 
 (Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Grant 
			McCool)
 
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