Chief Justice John Roberts and fellow conservative Brett Kavanaugh
indicated skepticism during two hours of arguments in the case
toward the stance by the Republican challengers that the entire law
must fall if a single key provision, called the individual mandate,
is deemed unconstitutional.
That provision originally required people to obtain insurance or pay
a financial penalty. Trump signed a law in 2017 that erased the
penalty, a change that Republicans then argued eliminated the
constitutional justification for the provision as permissible under
the power of Congress to levy taxes.
Roberts asked questions suggesting that because Congress did not
repeal the entire law, formally known as the Affordable Care Act (ACA),
when it eliminated the penalty, all of Obamacare should not be
invalidated due to this one change.
If Roberts and Kavanaugh join the court's three liberals in the
court's eventual ruling due by the end of June, the bulk of
Obamacare would survive.
"It's hard for you to argue that Congress intended the entire act to
fall if the mandate was struck down," said Roberts, who authored
2012 and 2015 rulings that upheld Obamacare in previous Republican
legal challenges.
The case represents the latest Republican legal attack on the 2010
law, Democratic former President Barack Obama's signature domestic
policy achievement. Republicans also have failed numerous times to
repeal Obamacare in Congress, though Trump's administration has
taken steps to hobble the law.
The justices heard arguments by teleconference in an appeal by a
coalition of 20 states including Democratic-governed California and
New York and the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives
hoping to preserve Obamacare. The court, with three Trump appointees
including Kavanaugh, has a 6-3 conservative majority.
After the arguments, President-elect Joe Biden, who served as
Obama's vice president, criticized the "right-wing ideologues" who
pursued the "simply cruel and needlessly divisive" litigation.
"This argument will determine whether (the) healthcare coverage of
more than 20 million Americans who acquired it under the Affordable
Care Act will be ripped away in the middle of the nation's worst
pandemic in a century," Biden told reporters in Delaware.
Citing a "moral obligation to ensure that here in America healthcare
is a right for all and not a privilege for a few," Biden promised to
start building on the Affordable Care Act immediately after
succeeding Trump on Jan. 20.
Obamacare expanded public healthcare programs and created
marketplaces for private insurance. Without Obamacare, Biden noted,
insurers could once again refuse to cover people with any
pre-existing medical conditions such as diabetes, cancer, asthma or
complications from COVID-19.
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Roberts and Kavanaugh appeared to agree that the mandate to obtain insurance can
be separated from the rest of the law.
"We ask ourselves whether Congress would want the rest of the law to survive if
an unconstitutional provision were severed," Roberts said.
The fact that Congress in 2017 left the rest of the law intact "seems to be
compelling evidence," Roberts added.
Kavanaugh added that "this is a fairly straightforward case for severability
under our precedents, meaning that we would excise the mandate and leave the
rest of the act in place."
LEGAL STANDING
The justices - conservatives and liberals alike - raised questions over whether
Texas and the other challengers had the proper legal standing to bring the case,
worrying about similar scenarios in which someone might be able to sue over some
other government mandate when no penalty exists.
Roberts said such a stance "expands standing dramatically" by enabling people to
challenge a whole host of laws without experiencing direct harm.
Justice Amy Coney Barrett, Trump's most recent appointee, asked skeptical
questions about legal standing. Democrats, ahead of Barrett's Senate
confirmation last month, focused their opposition to her appointment on the
Obamacare case, fearing she would vote to strike down the law. Her questions did
not indicate she would.
Trump's third appointee, Justice Neil Gorsuch, asked probing questions on
standing, though he sounded skeptical about the individual mandate's
constitutionality.
The 2012 ruling authored by Roberts defined the individual mandate's financial
penalty as a tax, thus finding the law permissible under the Constitution's
provision empowering Congress to levy taxes.
The 2017 Republican-backed change eliminating the penalty meant the individual
mandate could no longer be interpreted as a tax provision and was therefore
unconstitutional, the Republican challengers argued in their lawsuit filed in
2018.
Texas-based U.S. District Court Judge Reed O'Connor in 2018 ruled that Obamacare
was unconstitutional as currently structured following the elimination of the
penalty.
The New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last year also found the
mandate unconstitutional but stopped short of striking down Obamacare. The
Democratic-led states and House then appealed to the Supreme Court.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)
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