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Chief Justice Roberts’s Folly
National Review Online ^ | June 28, 2012 | The Editors

Posted on 06/28/2012 3:46:37 PM PDT by neverdem

In today’s deeply disappointing decision on Obamacare, a majority of the Supreme Court actually got the Constitution mostly right. The Commerce Clause — the part of the Constitution that grants Congress the authority to regulate commerce among the states — does not authorize the federal government to force Americans to buy health insurance. The Court, by a 5–4 margin, refused to join all the august legal experts who insisted that of course it granted that authorization, that only yahoos and Republican partisans could possibly doubt it. It then pretended that this requirement is constitutional anyway, because it is merely an application of the taxing authority. Rarely has the maxim that the power to tax is the power to destroy been so apt, a portion of liberty being the direct object in this case.

What the Court has done is not so much to declare the mandate constitutional as to declare that it is not a mandate at all, any more than the mortgage-interest deduction in the tax code is a mandate to buy a house. Congress would almost surely have been within its constitutional powers to tax the uninsured more than the insured. Very few people doubt that it could, for example, create a tax credit for the purchase of insurance, which would have precisely that effect. But Obamacare, as written, does more than that. The law repeatedly speaks in terms of a “requirement” to buy insurance, it says that individuals “shall” buy it, and it levies a “penalty” on those who refuse. As the conservative dissent points out, these are the hallmarks of a “regulatory penalty, not a tax.”

The law as written also cuts off all federal Medicaid funds for states that decline to expand the program in the ways the lawmakers sought. A majority of the Court, including two of the liberals, found this cut-off unconstitutionally coercive on the states. The Court’s solution was not to invalidate the law or the Medicaid expansion, but to rule that only the extra federal funds devoted to the expansion could be cut off. As the dissenters rightly point out, this solution rewrites the law — and arbitrarily, since Congress could have avoided the constitutional problem in many other ways.

The dissent acknowledges that if an ambiguous law can be read in a way that renders it constitutional, it should be. It distinguishes, though, between construing a law charitably and rewriting it. The latter is what Chief Justice John Roberts has done. If Roberts believes that this tactic avoids damage to the Constitution because it does not stretch the Commerce Clause to justify a mandate, he is mistaken. The Constitution does not give the Court the power to rewrite statutes, and Roberts and his colleagues have therefore done violence to it. If the law has been rendered less constitutionally obnoxious, the Court has rendered itself more so. Chief Justice Roberts cannot justly take pride in this legacy.

The Court has failed to do its duty. Conservatives should not follow its example — which is what they would do if they now gave up the fight against Obamacare. The law, as rewritten by judges, remains incompatible with the country’s tradition of limited government, the future strength of our health-care system, and the nation’s solvency. We are not among those who are convinced that we will be stuck with it forever if the next election goes wrong: The law is also so poorly structured that we think it may well unravel even if put fully into effect. But we would prefer not to take the risk.

It now falls to the Republicans, and especially to Mitt Romney, to make the case for the repeal of the law and for its replacement by something better than either it or the health-care policies that preceded it. Instead of trusting experts to use the federal government’s purchasing power to drive efficiency throughout the health sector — the vain hope of Obamacare’s Medicare-cutting board — they should replace Medicare with a new system in which individuals have incentives to get value for their dollar. Instead of having Washington establish a cartel for the insurance industry, they should give individuals tax credits and the ability to purchase insurance across state lines. Instead of further centralizing the health-care system, in short, they should give individuals more control over their insurance.

Opponents should take heart: The law remains unpopular. Let the president and his partisans ring their bells today, and let us work to make sure that they are wringing their hands come November.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: abortion; deathpanels; obamacare; obamacaredecision; obamacaretax; roberts; zerocare
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Cleaned it up a little...

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61 posted on 06/28/2012 7:57:52 PM PDT by Usually_Disappointed (I think the tree of liberty is getting thirsty...)
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To: adorno

If that is the case t’s still despicable. I’m sick of these people-judges, politicians, lobbyists, and every combination of these-playing politics with real people and real people’s lives. This may be a game to them because they never fail to make sure that they’re insulated from the consequences of all their social engineering reindeer games, but we peons have to live with the results, and our vote isn’t powerful enough with these corruptocrats to make a difference now. The elections are just some archaic obstacle they have to get through to attain power in lrder to do just what they want, using our lives as chess pieces. I’m sick of them all and they’re really asking for it by making voting meaningless.


62 posted on 06/28/2012 10:09:04 PM PDT by mrsmel (One Who Can See)
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To: dfwgator

I do not smoke.


63 posted on 06/29/2012 4:09:11 AM PDT by Rumplemeyer (The GOP should stand its ground - and fix Bayonets)
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To: babygene
And all those laws will stay there. Liberals don't give a crap about following precedent or the law. They do what they want. Roberts is simply a Washington Tool and must be treated as such. He should be impeached and removed, If all things are going to be political, and what else is rewriting a bill to allow it to stand even though 3/4 of the popular sentiment says NO, than the court should no longer be immune from popular sentiment and should be open to forced changes by the citizens through there representatives.
64 posted on 06/29/2012 5:53:33 AM PDT by Jim from C-Town (The government is rarely benevolent, often malevolent and never benign!)
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