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Colorado Attorney General John Suthers Declares Health Care Plan Unconstitutional
http://blogs.westword.com/latestword/2010/03/john_suthers_declares_newly_pa.php ^ | March 22, 2010 | Attorney General John Suthers

Posted on 03/22/2010 3:42:17 PM PDT by Heartlander2

FEDERAL HEALTH CARE PLAN REMARKS March 22, 2010

It is not part of my job as the Attorney General of Colorado to weigh in on whether the Patient Protection and Affordability Health Care Act passed by Congress yesterday is good public policy. It is however, part of my job to defend the rights of the State of Colorado and its citizens from the exercise of federal power in violation of the United States Constitution.

The U. S. Constitution gives the federal government only enumerated powers. All other powers are expressly left to the states and their people. One such enumerated power in the Constitution is the power to regulate interstate commerce. Under that enumerated power, anyone who voluntarily engages in commercial activity that affects interstate commerce is subject to regulation by Congress. So, for example, Congress may regulate people who choose to buy or sell insurance to the extent that impacts interstate commerce.

But in the health care legislation passed yesterday, Congress is attempting, for the first time in our history, to use the interstate commerce power to regulate citizens who choose not to engage in a commercial activity, by forcing them to buy insurance. Never before has Congress compelled Americans, under the threat of economic sanction, to purchase a particular product or service as a condition of living in this country. After careful analysis of the individual health care mandate and the arguments of various legal scholars, I have come to the conclusion that this expansion of federal power is unconstitutional and have made a decision to join several other state attorneys general in a lawsuit challenging the individual health care mandate.

Even the Congressional Budget Office understood the unprecedented implications of this legislation when it stated: "A mandate requiring all individuals to purchase health insurance would be an unprecedented form of federal action. The federal government has never before required people to buy any good or service as a condition of lawful residence in the United States."

As desirable as it may be for all Americans to purchase health care insurance, the commerce clause, or any other provision of the Constitution, does not give Congress the authority to compel a citizen, who would otherwise choose to be inactive in the marketplace, to purchase a product or service that Congress deems beneficial. Such an expansion of the current understanding of the commerce clause would leave no private sphere of individual commercial decision making beyond the reach of the federal government. Congress could make any citizen buy any product or service it wanted, if buying it would be commercial activity subject to the interstate commerce clause. Such an expansion of federal power would render the 10th Amendment meaningless.

I understand that many citizens of Colorado will allege that this lawsuit is politically motivated. It is not. I am not reacting to any group or constituency. All I can do is assure all Coloradans that my decision is based on my belief that the individual health care mandate is an unprecedented expansion of the power of the federal government that could undermine the rights of the states and their citizens for generations to come.


TOPICS: Government; US: Colorado
KEYWORDS: 10a; 10thamendment; 111th; 9a; 9thamendment; ag; bhohealthcare; bloggersandpersonal; colorado; obamacare; statesrights; suthers
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To: betty boop
Under this reading, there is no "private behavior" that could ever be beyond the reach of the Commerce Clause. Presumably, not even breathing — after all, we all "share" the same air....

Jeepers. Thank you so much for your insights, dearest sister in Christ!

61 posted on 03/23/2010 10:42:07 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: betty boop
Certainly the Framers never imagined, let alone intended, the Commerce Clause to be so omnipotent in its reach....

Agreed! I suspect most of the Framers being erudite men of some substance as well as students of the human condition were not likely blind to the possibility. One has to wonder if they considered the potential of a future federal income tax that would allow an almost limitless supply of feral funds which could be used for bribery, extortion and various protection rackets, not to mention the outright buying of voter blocs?

SHEESH, it's getting late!

62 posted on 03/23/2010 11:59:14 PM PDT by ForGod'sSake (You have two choices and two choices only: SUBMIT or RESIST with everything you've got!)
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To: Alamo-Girl

Aw shucks ma’am, you are much too kind. ;^)


63 posted on 03/24/2010 12:00:54 AM PDT by ForGod'sSake (You have two choices and two choices only: SUBMIT or RESIST with everything you've got!)
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