USA Supreme to Hear Legal Challenge to Obamacare's Individual Mandate
The Supreme
Court said Monday that it will take up a legal challenge to Obamacare, agreeing
to hear the case in its new term that begins in October. That means the program
will continue for at least another year.
It also
means the justices won't be handing down a ruling on the contentious issue of
health care this June, just as the presidential campaign heats up. That may be
good news for Republicans, who would prefer to avoid the issue in an election
year.
A federal
appeals court ruled in December that the individual mandate in Obamacare,
officially known as the Affordable Care Act, is unconstitutional. But it sent
the case back to the trial judge for another look at whether the entire law is
invalid or some parts can survive.
The U.S.
House of Representatives, controlled by Democrats, and a group of blue states
urged the Supreme Court in January to take the case and issue a decision
promptly, in its current term, instead of leaving the fate of the law in limbo.
"That
uncertainty threatens adverse consequences for our nation's health care system,
including for patients, doctors, insurers, and state and local
governments," they told the court.
But the
justices rejected the invitation for expedited scheduling, agreeing instead to
follow the normal rules.
Since the
law was passed, opponents have attacked a central feature known as the
individual mandate., which requires all Americans to buy insurance or pay a
penalty on their income tax. The Supreme Court upheld Obamacare in 2012, ruling
that it was a legitimate exercise of Congress's taxing authority.
But in 2017,
the Republican-led Congress set the tax penalty at zero. That led Texas and a
group of red states to rule that the revised law is unconstitutional. A federal
judge in Texas agreed, ruling that because the tax was eliminated, the law
could not no longer be saved as a use of the taxing power. The 5th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in New Orleans upheld that ruling by a 2-1 vote in
mid-December.
But the
appeals court decision ordered the trial judge to reconsider his ruling that
the entire law must fall without the glue of the individual mandate holding it
together. The Trump administration initially said parts the law could be saved
without the individual mandate, but then changed its position to say the rest
of the statute could not stand.
Now that the
Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case, it will not go back to the trial
judge for that analysis. The justices will hear the case in the fall, with a
decision by June of 2021.
FROM news.yahoo.com/supreme-court-challenge-obamacares-individual
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