The Top 10 Things to
Take Away From Last Week’s Supreme Court Obamacare Ruling
July 6,
2012
Original Link: http://verdict.justia.com/2012/07/06/the-top-10-things-to-take-away-from-last-weeks-supreme-court-obamacare-ruling
Note
from Granpa: Thought I would share this list in my blog, so down the road can
pull it up again to see if some of these opinions will be true.
You
can read the article below.. But
here are the titles of the 10 concerns:
·
10. The
Media Does a Poor Job of Predicting Supreme Court Results
·
9. Intrade
Users Do a Poor Job of Predicting Supreme Court Results
·
8. The
Supreme Court Suffers More Problematic Leaks Than We’ve Been Willing to Admit
·
7. Justice
Kennedy Is Not the Only Justice About Whom We Should Care in Big Cases
·
6. Chief
Justice Roberts Is Not Likely to Vote With the Liberals Consistently
·
5. The
Commerce Clause Doctrine That Got Made, While Symbolically Significant, May Not
Be Terribly Meaningful
·
4. The
Spending Clause Doctrine That Got Made Could Be Big
·
3. Hypocrisy
in the Doctrine of Federalism Remains a Big Problem
·
2.
Congress Dodged a Bullet, and Should Be More Careful in the Future
·
Chief
Justice Roberts Was the Big Winner in This Ruling
The Top 10 Things to Take Away From
Last Week’s Supreme Court Obamacare Ruling
July 6,
2012
Last Thursday’s landmark Supreme
Court Obamacare ruling and its aftermath offer some key lessons for all of us,
neophytes and veterans alike, who follow the Supreme Court. Some
teachings are forceful reminders of things we already knew (or should have
known); others break new ground. Here are my candidates for a “Top 10”
list:
10. The Media Does a Poor Job of Predicting Supreme Court Results
The majority of mainstream media
coverage of the anticipated ruling during the last few months seemed to assume
that major parts of the law, especially the so-called individual mandate, would
be struck down, and that the key question was whether other parts of the
statute would remain intact. Many of these assumptions derived from the
tenor of the oral argument. But it turns out Chief Justice Roberts said
nothing at oral argument that was inconsistent with his ultimate decision to
uphold the mandate. Nor was prediction the media’s only gaffe; in their
rush to get the headline out early, both CNN and Fox News misread the opinions
and embarrassingly reported that the Court had struck down the mandate.
9. Intrade Users Do a Poor Job of Predicting Supreme Court Results
In the weeks leading up to the
ruling, the online predictions marketplace, Intrade.com, forecast a 70%–80%
likelihood of Supreme Court invalidation of the mandate. That was up from
the 50%–60% Intrade range that had prevailed immediately following the oral
argument, and way up from the 30% range that we saw before oral argument.
All of these forecasts proved to be too high, suggesting that Intrade—though it
might do a good job with elections—may not be such a good mechanism for Supreme
Court prognostication.
8. The Supreme Court Suffers More Problematic Leaks Than We’ve Been Willing to Admit
One reason Intrade investors (and
it’s not clear that a gigantic amount of money ever traded hands) may have bet
that the mandate would be struck down was the report of rumors beginning in May
that Justice Kennedy, in particular, had voted against the government in the
conference after oral argument. Leaks from the Court before a decision is
announced are probably not unprecedented, but they are rare, and should be
troubling. So too should be the post-decision leaks of the past five days
indicating that Chief Justice Roberts changed his position during the last few
months. Putting the questions of whether he did so, and if so, why, to
one side, the Court is not served if its Justices and staff are so frustrated
by forthcoming or past results that they feel the need to share those results
with outsiders and to circumvent confidential Court processes, especially so
soon after the events in question took place.
7. Justice Kennedy Is Not the Only Justice About Whom We Should Care in Big Cases
Over the last year—indeed, the last
six years—Justice Anthony Kennedy has most consistently been in the majority in
hotly contested 5-4 rulings. Chief Justice Roberts, on the other hand,
has been in dissent in many significant criminal procedure decisions. But
in the Obamacare case that defined this term—and perhaps this decade—for the
Court, Roberts ruled and Kennedy lost. It is not an exaggeration to say
that the Affordable Care Act case was—in terms of the number of people affected,
the amount of money involved, and the symbolic, political and institutional
stakes on the line—bigger than all the other seventy-some cases the Court
decided this year put together.
6. Chief Justice Roberts Is Not Likely to Vote With the Liberals Consistently
It would be unwise to think that
Chief Justice Roberts will side with the so-called “liberal” Justices in
controversial cases very often; he remains a solidly conservative jurist whose
vote in the Obamacare matter may, in some respects, free him up for the rest of
his tenure on the Court to follow his conservative instincts, because the
Obamacare ruling will have a long-lasting effect of immunizing him from the
charge of partisan cronyism.
5. The Commerce Clause Doctrine That Got Made, While Symbolically Significant, May Not Be Terribly Meaningful
The position of the five Justices
(Chief Justice Roberts, along with Justices Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas, and Alito)
who opined that Congress cannot, under the Commerce Clause, regulate
“inactivity”—but instead must limit itself to regulating preexisting economic
activity—would seem to make states’ rights folks happy. But this new
Commerce Clause doctrine—in addition to makinglittle sense—will not likely change the world very much. As these
five Justices pointed out, Obamacare’s regulation of inactivity was unusual if
not unique, so there aren’t going to be a lot of other already existing federal
statutes that are subject to attack on the ground that they regulate
inactivity. And going forward, Congress can always formally tie its
regulation to an economic activity if it is careful.
For example, with respect to
Obamacare itself, Congress could have said, not that everyone is mandated to
procure insurance or else pay money into the Treasury, but rather than anyone
lacking insurance who enters onto a roadway or into any place of business shall
pay money into the Treasury. Voila! Regulation of activity. The
very ease of creating such alternative regulatory forms is why so many of us
found it unthinkable that the activity/inactivity line should doom
Obamacare; when the question is how, rather than whether, Congress can
accomplish something, the doctrinal lines should be clearly and sensibly drawn
by the Court in advance, lest federalism rulings devolve into judicial “gotcha”
games.
So the real issue in this case was
not what effect a requirement that Congress stick to regulating activity only
would have in the future; the real issue was whether such a requirement would
kill Obamacare itself, a law that was passed when no reasonable mind could have
anticipated the Court would impose such a “Simon Says” requirement. But
since Obamacare survived (because five Justices found Congress’ taxation power
sufficient, irrespective of Commerce Clause power), the activity/inactivity
line isn’t worth losing much sleep over.
4. The Spending Clause Doctrine That Got Made Could Be Big
By contrast, the new Spending Clause
doctrine that got made in the Obamacare case—preventing Congress from
discontinuing all Medicaid monies to states that refused to agree to new,
expanded coverage—might be a bigger deal. There are at least two possible
ways to read the Court’s new Spending Clause gambit. First, the Court
might be saying that if Congress is ever going to reserve for itself the right
to fundamentally alter a federal-state cooperative fiscal deal, it has to be
much more explicit at the front end to warn states that they should not expect
and rely upon continued funding under terms identical or similar to the initial
deal. If so, that ruling (like the Commerce Clause ruling) is but a
legislative drafting guide for Congress for the future (albeit one that might
impair Congress’ power to revise existing programs that have been around a
while.)
The second possibility is that no
matter how explicit Congress’ warnings are, Congress might not be able to
rewrite conditional spending deals with states when states in fact have relied
on past allocations to their significant detriment. If Congress is
required to maintain deals that it no longer likes, even when it has been
crystal clear up front about the possibility that it might radically change
funding formulas, simply because states are addicted to the federal funding,
that would indeed suggest meaningful new, substantive, limits on
Congress. Such a doctrinal path may be defensible if federalism and
protecting states from federal “coercion” are to remain meaningful goals, but it
is certainly a new path that was not signaled very clearly in past Court
rulings. There are, to be sure, slippery slopes down such a path, but
that (as I have argued about Congress’ power to regulate inactivity) need not
be an insurmountable problem.
3. Hypocrisy in the Doctrine of Federalism Remains a Big Problem
When we put the Commerce Clause and
Spending Clause parts of the outcome together, we see that even within a single
case, there is a lot of intellectual inconsistency in the federalism
doctrine. A majority of the Court rejects Congress’ power to regulate
inactivity because that power presents slippery slopes. But the same
majority (plus two) accepts new limits on Congress’ ability to withdraw funds
to states, even though those new limits will require difficult line-drawing.
In the Commerce Clause setting, a
majority rejects that idea that the healthcare and healthcare insurance markets
have unusual or unique qualities, legitimizing a mandate in those fields but
not elsewhere. And in placing limits on Congress’ ability to withdraw
Medicaid funding, that same majority highlights how unusual, perhaps unique,
the healthcare and Medicaid programs are.
In the Commerce Clause arena, a
formalistic line between activity and inactivity is seized upon. In the
Spending Clause arena, formalism concerning whether a state technically has a
choice over acceptance of funding that comes with new strings is rejected, in
favor of a more functional analysis of whether states are in fact coerced
because of their past reliance. And so forth.
I personally think that formalistic
approaches to federalism that are not undergirded by workable functional
theories are unhelpful, but my main point here is that this area of law
continues to lack a clear analytic framework that can be used to explain and
predict results.
2. Congress Dodged a Bullet, and Should Be More Careful in the Future
Let’s face it: the Court came
within an eyelash of striking down the heart of the biggest federal regulatory
law in decades. One reason for this is that five Justices, perhaps because the
momentum of the litigation overwhelmed its analytics, embraced faulty
reasoning—that was not really grounded in text, history, structure or
precedent—in construing the Commerce Clause, and that some Justices seem
unwilling to give clear notice in advance to Congress of the technical rules
they are willing to impose on the legislative branch in federalism
rulings. But another reason is that Congress does not—and does not even
seem to try to—take federalism limits on its powers seriously when it passes
legislation. Why no extensive hearings during Obamacare on the
constitutional basis for the mandate? Why no testimony (which I think
would have been available) from leading conservative scholars before enactment
suggesting that the mandate would be permissible? Why no explanation from
Congress in the record showing there were ways in which it could have formally
regulated activity to reach the same result? And why, if the mandate’s fiscal
effects on individuals were clear for all to see (as they were), did Congress
play games by avoiding the use of the word “tax” for a revenue-raising measure
housed in the Internal Revenue Code and implemented by the Internal Revenue
Service? The federalism cases of the past 20 years make one thing clear:
a large number of Justices are quite willing to enforce the Tenth Amendment,
and Congress should not be so cavalier if it wants to avoid getting burned.
1. Chief Justice Roberts Was the Big Winner in This Ruling
In giving Congress the benefit of
the doubt and upholding the key aspects of Obamacare under the Taxation power
clauses, while at the same time cutting back on established understandings of
Commerce Clause power and Spending Clause power, Chief Justice Roberts claimed
the current Supreme Court as his own, and began to build for himself a legacy
of greatness. Roberts was able to: 1) make some conservative law,
consistent with his instincts about federalism; 2) do so in the context of a result
that makes it hard for President Obama and others who differ from Roberts’s
basic constitutional outlook to complain; 3) do so in a manner that enhanced
the credibility of the Court as an independent, non-partisan arbiter.
He was also able to get 7 votes
(including two Democrat appointees) to join in to invalidate under the Spending
Clause the Medicaid expansion conditions of the Affordable Care Act, the only
part of the Act that was trimmed back. If the Court is going to strike
down even a part of the most thoroughly vetted Congressional legislation of the
modern era at a time of hyperpartisanship, how refreshingly healthy and
remarkable to have a cross-ideological coalition of Justices doing it.
Importantly, Roberts was the only
Justice who agreed with every single important thing the Court decided in the
case.
None of these accomplishments is
diminished by the fact that Roberts might have changed his mind since his
initial post-argument stance. There is nothing wrong with changing one’s
mind as a Justice; it says nothing bad about his motivations, but rather only
that he came to see the case differently the more he thought about the issues
and arguments. If anything, there should be more mind-changing
after oral argument and the initial vote; remember, the draft opinions don’t
circulate until later, and it is upon reading the opinions (and additional
scholarly commentary that might not have been analyzed before argument) that
Justices should decide which ones they really agree with. Sometimes you think
you have a bottom-line position, only to learn that “it won’t write.”
When we widen the focus to make
historical comparisons, we see that Chief Justice Roberts shares, or at least
appreciates, the instincts of some of his most revered predecessors. Take
John Marshall, whose two most enduring opinions are McCulloch v. Maryland
and Marbury v. Madison. Roberts’s opinion was similar to McCulloch
(in which the Court decided Congress had the power to charter the Bank of the
U.S.) in making clear that Congress’ powers are finite but broad, and that
Congress must be given the benefit of the doubt so long as its objectives are
legitimate and sincere, and the means it uses are likely to advance those
objectives. Roberts’s ruling was similar to Marbury (the case known for
cementing the Court’s competence to declare federal statutes invalid when they
run afoul of the Constitution), in that the Marbury ruling allowed
Marshall to move constitutional law toward his own ideological sympathies while
reaching an immediate result that avoided a direct political confrontation with
a President (Thomas Jefferson) who opposed Marshall’s constitutional vision.
Not all chief justices have been
successful at pivotal moments in avoiding altercations with oppositional
presidents. Chief Justice Roger Taney (who authored the infamous Dred
Scott ruling) picked, rather than passed up, fights with Abraham Lincoln.
And Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes could not stop his Court from
demolishing huge chunks of President Franklin Roosevelt’s early agenda.
Like these two men, Roberts was already Chief Justice when a watershed election
swept a reform-minded president into the White House. But unlike these
two earlier chiefs, Roberts—following the lead of John Marshall—found a way to
stand his intellectual ground without provoking a battle royal with the Chief
Executive.
Posted In Constitutional Law, Courts and Procedure, Health Law
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"We can not change the PAST.
But we can use the Past to make a better day, TODAY"
But we can use the Past to make a better day, TODAY"
Just a thought from Keeper of the web
files for http://nfpcar.org/FPA/emails/Current.htm
May
you find Strength in Your Higher Power,
GranPa Chuck
Pro Se Way>>
"We the "Little" People"
My Family Reform Blog
My Family Rights Affiliation
GranPa Chuck
Pro Se Way>>
"We the "Little" People"
My Family Reform Blog
My Family Rights Affiliation
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