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Posted on 06/29/2012 11:22:29 AM PDT by smoothsailing
June 29, 2012
by Scott Ott
Conservatives, Constitutionalists, and originalists grew increasingly alarmed as word trickled from the Supreme Court yesterday that Chief Justice John Roberts had voted with the liberals to uphold the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act four months before the election! Roberts has handed President Obama a victory on his singular legislative accomplishment, they said, and abandoned all reason in calling the individual mandate a tax, though even Congress didnt call it that when the bill was passed.
Even wobbly Justice Anthony Kennedy joined the conservative stalwarts Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, and Antonin Scalia in deriding Roberts for rewriting ObamaCare to save it. Their dissenting opinion was simple: Congress calls the fee for refusing to purchase insurance a penalty, so thats what it is. Roberts shouldnt try to make it something lawmakers didnt intend.
Indeed, when the president peddled his plan, he repeatedly denied creating a new tax. But before the Court, when the future of the law hung in the balance, the administration argued that if the Court could not uphold it on constitutional commerce clause grounds, then perhaps it could be considered part of Congress constitutional taxing power. The dissenters argue against such obvious dissembling, and note that the Court has never held never that a penalty imposed for violation of the law was so trivial as to be in effect a tax.
Roberts agreed with his conservative colleagues that Congress has no power to command consumers to buy insurance, since the commerce clause cant regulate failure to engage in commerce. Having rejected the governments main argument, and saved us from a hellish future of untrammeled congressional power, he felt compelled to grapple with the administrations Plan B the tax gambit. There, his deference to the legislative branch supported by a long history of precedent stayed his hand from striking down the law.
Was this capitulation? Is he irrational or cowardly? Off his meds? You decide.
Heres a brief summary of the reasoning that led him to conclude the individual mandate is a tax, and thus within the power of Congress.
1. Its not the courts job to evaluate the wisdom or practicality of a law, merely to determine whether it violates the Constitution.
2. Respecting the separation of powers, the Court should make every reasonable effort to uphold legislation.
3. The governments fall-back justification for the individual mandate was the power of Congress to lay and collect taxes to provide for the general welfare of the United States.” (Article 1, Section 8 )
4. No matter what the law calls the individual mandate, if it looks like a tax and quacks like a tax, its a tax.
5. The shared responsibility payment for failure to buy health insurance is collected by the IRS, based on income, and clears the payor of responsibility to the law. If it were just a penalty, the payor would be considered guilty of unlawful activity before the bar of justice. But under ObamaCare, youve done your civic duty even if you fail to buy insurance, so long as you pay the fee.
6. Because its a tax, Congress may impose it without offending the Constitutions enumeration of powers.
For years, conservatives have argued that the Supreme Court should not decide cases based on ideology or personal preference, but upon the text of the Constitution, and upon established precedent under that charter. Justices should not legislate from the bench.
While judicial lawmaking is exactly what Justices Alito, Thomas, Kennedy, and Scalia accuse Roberts of doing, he asserts precisely the opposite. He refrains from overturning a law that, clearly, he considers ill-advised, badly crafted, and ultimately doomed.
His reckless restraint, as some might view it, is anchored in the doctrine of separation of powers. He also telegraphs to his readers that the way to deal with this offensive law is near at hand, in November.
While I would prefer an outcome that supports my principles, and advances the cause of my party, my primary allegiance must be to the process established under the supreme law of the land.
The easier solution to a vexing problem is to have someone powerful remove it. The hard way calls for devotion, on your part, to upholding our values using our constitutional prerogative to replace the incompetent, the corrupt, and the compromised.
If we should fail to do so this November, our whining about Roberts betrayal will do nothing to stop the onslaught of ObamaCare. And in the near future, when a law comes along that we wish to see upheld, well be grateful for the precedent set by Roberts reasonable restraint.
If remanded to the Congress it wouldn't pass again.
That the courts take 3 years in this day of instant communications to reach a simpleton decision is a crime.
quit whining is the operative term here...
Congress can tax anything... they can also give deductions for anything.
Everyone got a 2.5 tax increase when ObamaCareTax passed. There’s a deduction when you buy health insurance, that’s what Robert’s ruled.
While I don’t like the current situation, the fact is if we lose in November, the laws and the Constitution won’t matter any more any way.
You silly people are missing the point. The mandate was not a tax, thus making this case ripe for consideration by Lil Jonny Kerry Robert’s Court of Jesters. Of course, once the Court conisdered the matter, the mandate was a tax. So, Lil Jonny voted for it not being a tax before it was one.
This is the money quote:
“For years, conservatives have argued that the Supreme Court should not decide cases based on ideology or personal preference, but upon the text of the Constitution, and upon established precedent under that charter. Justices should not legislate from the bench.”
Yet to listen to most of FR, we only care about judicial activism when the other side does it.
All the angst and vitriol directed towards Justice Roberts is wrong. Bad laws come from Congress, not the Court, and the only solution is going to have to come from the same place.
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