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Lawsuits that Could Make the Decrepit HealthCare.Gov Look Like a Hiccup
Townhall.com ^ | November 3, 2013 | Michael F. Cannon

Posted on 11/03/2013 9:40:05 AM PST by Kaslin

Last week, I discussed the importance of generating additional legal challenges to the IRS’s attempt to tax, borrow, and spend $700 billion, under the rubric of ObamaCare, yet contrary to the clear language of the statute and Congress’ intent. Four lawsuits have already been filed to challenge those illegal taxes and spending. The plaintiffs include two attorneys general, more than a dozen school districts, three private employers and eight individual taxpayers. A ruling for any of these plaintiffs would make the problems with ObamaCare’s decrepit HealthCare.gov web site look like a hiccup.

Last week, there was activity in one of those cases, Halbig v. Sebelius. Tomorrow, there will be hearing on another, King v. Sebelius.

Background

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act directs states to establish health insurance “exchanges,” directs the federal government to establish Exchanges in states that do not, and offers subsidies to certain taxpayers who enroll in qualified health plans “through an Exchange established by the State.” (The subsidies are technically tax credits, though they are tax reduction in name only.) The mere availability of those subsidies triggers penalties against individuals under the law’s individual mandate, while the issuance of such subsidies triggers penalties against employers under its employer mandate. In a final rule purporting to implement the law’s tax-credit rules, the IRS announced it would issue subsidies in all states, even the 34 states that do not have “an Exchange established by the State.”

“Legal challenges to the IRS’s attempt to tax, borrow, and spend $700 billion, under the rubric of ObamaCare.”

Jonathan Adler and I explained the problems with that rule in our law-journal article, “Taxation Without Representation: The Illegal IRS Rule to Expand Tax Credits Under the PPACA.” This Cato Institute study offers a layman’s version of the arguments.

In Halbig v. Sebelius, three private employers and four individual taxpayers have challenged that IRS rule in a federal court in Washington, DC. All seven plaintiffs are located in states that have opted not to establish an Exchange. They allege the IRS’s decision to offer unauthorized subsidies in their states will subject them to financial penalties that Congress did not authorize and force them to take costly steps to avoid those penalties.

Notes on Halbig Oral Arguments

Last Monday, U.S. District Judge Paul L. Friedman heard oral arguments on the government’s motion to dismiss Halbig, and the plaintiff’s request that the court issue a preliminary injunction against the IRS rule. Here are a few items of interest from my notes.

At the end of Monday’s hearing, Friedman asked the parties to reconvene the very next day, when he issued an oral opinion denying both the government’s motion to dismiss the case, and the plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction.

Court’s Ruling Rebuffs the IRS and Its Defenders

Friedman’s denial of the government’s motion to dismiss was a serious blow to the IRS and its defenders. It was the second time a federal court has held that a plaintiff has standing to challenge the IRS rule. The first came in August, when a federal judge in Oklahoma ruled against the government’s motion to dismiss that state’s challenge to the IRS rule in Pruitt v. Sebelius. Friedman found that plaintiff David Klemencic likewise had standing. Both courts rejected the litanies of arguments the government offered, such as that the plaintiffs’ alleged injury was too speculative and not ripe for adjudication.

These dual rulings dealt a further blow to the credibility of the IRS’s defenders. The agency’s earliest and most ardent defender is a law professor at Washington & Lee University named Timothy Jost, who was influential in the drafting of the PPACA and has been influential in its implementation. He even attended the signing ceremony along with, in his words, “secretaries and congress people and various other leaders who had worked on the bill.”

In 2010, when 18 state attorneys general first challenged the PPACA’s mandate that states expand their Medicaid programs, Jost dismissed their legal claims as being so “devoid of legal authority” that the attorneys general should be sanctioned under Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and be held personally liable for the government’s defense costs. As we all know, the Supreme Court ruled 7-2 for the attorneys general on their Medicaid challenge.

In 2011, when critics first noted the IRS’s tax-credit rule was illegal, Jost admitted that the statute plainly restricts tax credits to states that establish Exchanges, but later backtracked and changed his story.

Jost also dismissed the critics’ reading of the statute as absurd by claiming there was “no coherent policy reason” for restricting subsidies to state-established Exchanges. Only later did we learn that Jost himself had offered the rationale for this feature of the law in early 2009.

Finally, in 2011, both Jost and George Washington University law professor Sara Rosenbaum confidently claimed that no one would have standing to mount a legal challenge to the IRS’s attempt to issue subsidies through federal Exchanges. Jost later backtracked to say that only employers would have standing.

The courts proved both professors wrong. The federal court in Oklahoma showed they were wrong on employer standing, while Judge Friedman has shown they were wrong on individual taxpayers having standing.

Halbig Proceeds to the Merits

Though Friedman denied the plaintiffs’ request for a preliminary injunction, which would have immediately blocked the IRS rule, he acknowledged the issue is “of some urgency to both sides” and announced, “I want to do it quickly.” Attorneys for both sides agreed to make all motions and file all relevant briefs in November. Friedman will hear oral arguments on December 3, and will enter final judgment by February 15 – though he certainly could (and ideally would) rule before the IRS begins dispensing the disputed funds on January 1.

Friedman did not tip his hand on the merits of the case, but here’s what he had to say (according to a transcript of his oral opinion that’s not yet available online):

So, what about success on the merits? Even if I assume that there — even if there were some threat of irreparable harm to Mr. Klemencic, what about the merits? If the sliding scale analysis still applies, the plaintiffs would have to show, since I’ve said I didn’t find any irreparable harm, a particularly strong likelihood of success on the merits. And I don’t think the plaintiffs have made that showing. And let me be very clear what I’m saying here because this is important to you and to the world at large.

The plaintiffs make a very good argument. We spent a lot of time on this yesterday. That the words in the statute, an Exchange, quote, established by a state, should be construed literally and that federal Exchanges are not established by a state. The defendants have a good argument, too, at least a credible argument, that when you view this in the context of the entire statute and the overall scheme of things, and when you apply Chevron to the regulation, that they’re likely to win on the merits…

So, all I’m saying is that if, on preliminary injunction, in a case where I find no irreparable harm, the plaintiffs have the burden of showing a particularly strong likelihood of success on the merits, I don’t think they’ve done that. They have made an argument that may ultimately be successful. The defendants have made an argument that may ultimately be successful. And as I delve further into the statute, with the assistance of additional briefing by the parties, the strength of each party’s position will become clearer.

(Emphasis added, based on my recollection.)

Oral Arguments in King Tomorrow

A federal court in Richmond will hear oral arguments tomorrow in a similar case. In King v. Sebelius, four individual taxpayers are challenging the IRS rule and have requested a preliminary injunction. Tomorrow, the court will hear arguments on that motion. Again, if granted, an injunction could stop the IRS from issuing subsidies in the 34 states with federal Exchanges.

For more, have a look at this Los Angeles Times article on the lawsuits.

And keep checking back here for more updates.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Front Page News; Government
KEYWORDS: abortion; deathpanels; obamacare; zerocare
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To: bert
In spite of Rush’s repeatedly loud warnings, I see no basis in the current law for a single payer system.

The congress must legislate a single payer

The 2014 elections are of supreme importance. The rats will try every dirty trick there is. And who do we have to fight them? The IRS tried to take out the Tea Party (can you believe how bad this is???) and the GOPe doesn't care. It's up to us.

21 posted on 11/03/2013 3:07:38 PM PST by Aria ( 2008 & 2012 weren't elections - they were coup d'etats.)
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To: CivilWarBrewing

The answer is your handle.


22 posted on 11/03/2013 3:13:38 PM PST by ExTexasRedhead
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To: Aria

If the treacherous tyrants prevail, they will lose...... for ever


23 posted on 11/03/2013 4:11:46 PM PST by bert ((K.E. N.P. N.C. +12 ..... Travon... Felony assault and battery hate crime)
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To: andyk
There's a well established line of cases standing for the proposition that the use of the "instrumentalities" of Interstate Commerce subjects one to the ICC. I can't think of any company in this day and age that goes not utilize those instrumentalities - they include just about every means of communication employed in the contemporary world. The ICC has been expanded to the point that it has become a license for the feds to regulate any enterprise they want to get their hooks into.



America demands Justice for the Fallen of Benghazi!

Eagles Up! Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more!

Listen, O isles, unto me; and hearken, ye people, from far; The LORD hath called me from the womb; from the bowels of my mother hath he made mention of my name. (Isaiah 49:1 KJV)

24 posted on 11/03/2013 4:47:58 PM PST by ConorMacNessa (HM/2 USN - 3/5 Marines RVN 1969 - St. Michael the Archangel defend us in Battle!)
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To: Aria

“When they came for the Tea Party, I did not care because I was not a member”......


25 posted on 11/03/2013 6:33:41 PM PST by goodtomato (I'm really, really blessed!)
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To: bert
I see no basis in the current law for a single payer system. The congress must legislate a single payer

Exactly. My prediction is that Obamacare will cause so much strife, suffering, and economic dislocation, that Congress' credibility will be so utterly low that they won't be able to pass such legislation.

In the end, the American people are going to demand that Obamacare be ripped out by its roots and cast into the fire.

26 posted on 11/03/2013 7:44:48 PM PST by Windflier (To anger a conservative, tell him a lie. To anger a liberal, tell him the truth.)
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To: bert
If the treacherous tyrants prevail, they will lose...... for ever

No they won't, because nobody is going to do anything. Why bury them, because when it reaches that point, is exactly the time you're going to need them in hand.

27 posted on 11/03/2013 11:17:17 PM PST by wastedyears (Ender's Game in theaters Nov. 1st)
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To: Kaslin

bttt


28 posted on 11/04/2013 2:06:40 AM PST by SoFloFreeper
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To: bert
The congress must legislate a single payer...

Which is the agenda, spoken or not, of the push to move the House and Senate deep into the hands and power of the Demon Rat party in 2014.

29 posted on 11/04/2013 2:08:29 AM PST by SoFloFreeper
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To: andyk

That is certainly the precedent. Scalia and Thomas regularly ridicule extensions of that in dissenting rulings.


30 posted on 11/04/2013 5:14:08 AM PST by lepton ("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
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To: The Great RJ

Its very length is proof to any logical person that there was never any intent for it to succeed as advertised. All one need know is that the government intends to reform health care and you know that the results will be disastrous REGARDLESS of intent. To know the length of the bill is to know that no human could possibly read, understand and retain the meaning of all that without years of study and even then most people lack the capacity to understand it even if such a thing could be written in a coherent manner which is impossible at that length. Then when you have legislators admitting they don’t know what is in it yet they vote for it anyway and the speaker of the house makes the astounding statement that it must be passed before you can find out what is in it it becomes blatantly obvious that there was NEVER any benign intent behind this absurd monstrosity. The thing that is so maddeningly frustrating to me is that so many voters still cannot seem to grasp the evil intent behind this assualt on human dignity.


31 posted on 11/04/2013 5:25:18 AM PST by RipSawyer (The TREE currently falling on you actually IS worse than a Bush.)
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To: cableguymn
"They can’t.. Insurance companies are to weak kneed to fight it."

Oh contrare. The Insurance companies stand to make trillions of dollars in the final cut. They're obombacare's biggest proponents. Pretending like they are victims and "only doing what the law says" they "have to do" keeps them shielded from any examination that will shed light on this truth. There is a lot of blood on the insurance companies hands and they love it. They are orgasmic with the reality that every single person in America now HAS TO buy insurance. They are also excited that they will now no longer have as many, if any, insurance agents they will have to share the booty with and... obombacare's exchanges will help to insure that smaller, less established insurance companies cannot compete. Ever belong to a Union? These exchanges are set up the same way. It's a good'ol boy network. If "we" like you you can join. If we don't... take a hike.

No... the antichrist (aka - barack o bamah) knows exactly what he is doing and who to align with.

32 posted on 11/04/2013 7:20:48 AM PST by Whats-wrong-with-the-truth
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To: Whats-wrong-with-the-truth
They are orgasmic with the reality that every single person in America now HAS TO buy insurance.

... or the government will buy it for them, from said companies. Same thing as far as they are concerned.

33 posted on 11/04/2013 10:31:37 AM PST by Pearls Before Swine
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To: TLI

Republicans really are in the stupid party. All they have to do is start pointing out this is not about affordable care. It’s about affordable insurance. And it even failed on that issue.


34 posted on 11/04/2013 1:53:05 PM PST by VerySadAmerican (".....Barrack, and the horse Mohammed rode in on.")
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To: TLI

People who have nothing to lose will eventually lose it, expect to see politicians suffer for voting for this law.


35 posted on 11/04/2013 10:01:04 PM PST by Hoosier-Daddy ( "It is not our job to protect the people from the consequences of their political choices.")
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To: wastedyears

I expect some people whose hearts are utterly broken over the loss of someone they love as a result of Obamacare will reach out and touch someone in the power structure.

When people have nothing to lose, they lose it.

I’m guessing that’s what they are counting on.

129 million losing their health might not turn out as expected, though.


36 posted on 11/04/2013 10:09:41 PM PST by Hoosier-Daddy ( "It is not our job to protect the people from the consequences of their political choices.")
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To: Hoosier-Daddy

To them, that’s a lot less people to worry about and less mouths to feed.


37 posted on 11/04/2013 10:14:53 PM PST by wastedyears (Ender's Game in theaters Nov. 1st)
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To: JediJones

“How do the feds have authority to tell them what kind of product they can sell when there is no interstate commerce involved?”

How ‘bout “Authoritay Uber Alles”?


38 posted on 11/05/2013 7:41:31 AM PST by GladesGuru (Islam Delenda Est - Because of what Islam is and because of what Muslims do.)
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To: CivilWarBrewing

I don’t think that “single payer” is inevitable. The GOP has outright control of a 26 of the states. Dems only have 19. The final five are mixed.

http://www.multistate.com/state-resources/governors-legislatures

Health care is by and large a local phenomenon - licensing of medical practitioners, siting of hospitals and facilities, etc. Therefore costs are mostly a local phenomenon. These states can do a lot to undermine federal control and lower costs to their residents.

Also, if we have “sanctuary” cities for illegals, why not sanctuary states for health care providers and their patients?


39 posted on 11/05/2013 10:23:02 AM PST by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: bert

If ‘Single Payer’ goes to SCROTUS, it might die there even with Roberts.


40 posted on 11/05/2013 10:32:03 AM PST by CivilWarBrewing
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