U.S. appeals court signals sympathy to bid to strike down Obamacare
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[July 10, 2019]
By Nate Raymond
NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) - A federal appeals
court panel appeared sympathetic on Tuesday to Republican efforts to
overturn Obamacare, expressing skepticism to Democratic calls to
overturn the ruling of a Texas judge who found the landmark U.S.
healthcare reform law unconstitutional.
Two Republican-appointed members of the three-judge panel of the 5th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sharply questioned lawyers for a group of
Democratic state attorneys general and the Democratic-led U.S. House of
Representatives defending the Affordable Care Act.
Republicans including President Donald Trump have repeatedly and
unsuccessfully tried to repeal the ACA since it was passed in 2010. The
Justice Department would normally defend a federal law, but Trump's
administration has declined to do so in a challenge by 18 Republican-led
states.
The court made no decision on Tuesday. Whichever way it rules, the
decision could prompt an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, potentially
setting up a major legal battle over healthcare for tens of millions of
Americans in the midst of the 2020 U.S. presidential election.
The judges focused on whether Obamacare lost its legal justification
after Trump in 2017 signed a law that eliminated a tax penalty used to
enforce the law's mandate that all Americans buy health insurance.
"If you no longer have the tax, why isn't it unconstitutional?" Judge
Jennifer Elrod, who was appointed by Republican President George W.
Bush, asked during Tuesday's hearing on a sweltering day in New Orleans.
Judge Kurt Engelhardt, a Trump appointee, asked why if Congress thought
the law had so many "excellent ideas" unrelated to its "linchpin"
mandate, it would not have taken steps to ensure the rest of the law
would not be struck down as well.
"There's a political solution here that you, various parties are asking
this court to roll up its sleeves and get involved in," Engelhardt said.
A coalition of Democratic state attorneys general led by California's
Xavier Becerra stepped up to defend the signature achievement of Trump's
Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama. The House of Representatives
intervened after Democrats won control in the November midterm
elections, during which many focused their campaigns on defending
Obamacare.
Republican opponents call the law an unwarranted intervention by
government in health insurance markets, while supporters say striking it
down would threaten the healthcare of 20 million people who have gained
insurance since its enactment.
In 2012, a divided U.S. Supreme Court upheld most of its provisions,
including the individual mandate, which requires people to obtain
insurance or pay a penalty.
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U.S. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), holding a picture
of head-injury victim Emilie Saltzman, and House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi (D-CA) lead fellow congressional Democrats for remarks on
health care coverage of pre-existing conditions, on the steps of the
U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S. July 9, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst
The mandate compelled healthy people to buy insurance to offset
sicker patients' costs after Obamacare barred insurers from denying
coverage to people with pre-existing health conditions.
The Supreme Court's conservative majority found Congress could not
constitutionally order people to buy insurance. But Chief Justice
John Roberts joined the court's four liberal members to hold the
mandate was a valid exercise of Congress' tax power.
After Trump signed a tax bill passed by a Republican-led Congress
that reduced the tax penalty to zero dollars, a coalition of
Republican-led states headed by Texas sued, alleging the tax
penalty's elimination rendered Obamacare unconstitutional.
"IT'S COMPLICATED"
In December 2018, U.S. District Judge Reed O'Connor in Fort Worth,
Texas, agreed. O'Connor, who was also nominated by George W. Bush,
said that because Obamacare called the mandate "essential," the
entire law must be struck down.
Kyle Hawkins, Texas' solicitor general, said "essential" language
was all the 5th Circuit needed to look at to see the entire law
should be struck down. "The best evidence is the text itself," he
said.
Douglas Letter, the House of Representatives' general counsel,
argued that since Congress had not repealed the rest of Obamacare,
it never intended to invalidate the entire law.
"Courts are required to give a statute a constitutional
interpretation if you can and save everything unless Congress
prefers no statute," he argued.
The Justice Department initially argued the mandate was
unconstitutional but most of Obamacare could be severed from it. But
it argued on appeal that rest of the law cannot be severed.
Pressed by Elrod on the administration's plans if Obamacare is
struck down, August Flentje, a Justice Department lawyer, said, “A
lot of this stuff would need to get sorted out, and it’s
complicated."
(Reporting by Nate Raymond; Editing by Scott Malone, Bill Berkrot,
Richard Chang and Leslie Adler)
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