Peter Robinson · March 27, 2012 at 8:02pm

Just posted on the website of the New York Times, more evidence that, as Adam notes below, the mandate is in trouble:

“Can you create commerce in order to regulate it?” Justice Anthony M. Kennedy asked the lawyer, Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli Jr., only minutes into the argument.

Justice Antonin Scalia soon joined in. “May failure to purchase something subject me to regulation?” he asked.

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. asked if the government could compel the purchase of cellphones. And Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. asked about forcing people to buy burial insurance.

The conventional view is that the administration will need one of those four votes to win, and it was not clear that it had captured one.

Too early to pop the corks, of course.  But lay in some champagne.

ObamaCare delenda est.

Comments:


Don Tillman
Joined
May '10
Don Tillman

Now, now, now... you'll jinx it if you get too optimistic.

(That said, I understand that the ideal temperature for Champaign is 46 degrees Fahrenheit, 8 degrees Celsius.)


Joined
Sep '10
liberal jim

While it would be some sort of victory to have  O-care overturned by the courts it is hardly a cause for celebration.    The choices offered to voters by the two major parties is to continue moving toward socialism quickly or continue to move toward socialism more slowly.   Will limited government conservatives be able to take control of the GOP?  That is the important question and it looks like this is no where close to happening.

Paul A. Rahe

Very, very interesting, Peter. It gives one hope.

Paul A. Rahe
liberal jim: While it would be some sort of victory to have  O-care overturned by the courts it is hardly a cause for celebration.    The choices offered to voters by the two major parties is to continue moving toward socialism quickly or continue to move toward socialism more slowly.   Will limited government conservatives be able to take control of the GOP?  That is the important question and it looks like this is no where close to happening. · 2 minutes ago

I agree, but beggars cannot be choosers -- and right now we do not have a viable candidate. Alas.


Joined
Apr '11
wmartin

What I heard was that Kennedy was saying that there had to be a extremely serious justification for changing the relationship between the citizen and the state. But my guess (and that of Ace Of Spades)  is that he will decide that health care is important enough to provide that justification and they will write a "we will allow it this time" opinion.

Mendel
Joined
Mar '11
Mendel

Paul A. Rahe

liberal jim: While it would be some sort of victory to have  O-care overturned by the courts it is hardly a cause for celebration.    The choices offered to voters by the two major parties is to continue moving toward socialism quickly or continue to move toward socialism more slowly.   Will limited government conservatives be able to take control of the GOP?  That is the important question and it looks like this is no where close to happening. · 2 minutes ago

I agree, but beggars cannot be choosers -- and right now we do not have a viable candidate. Alas.

Even the perfect candidate is useless as long as 80% of the electorate can't stomach any cuts to Medicaid or Medicare.

Striking down the individual mandate is necessary and proper, but until a majority of Americans doesn't instinctively look to the state to provide healthcare, my champagne consumption will be limited to the drowning of sorrows.

Troy Senik, Ed.

To buttress this line of thought, consider this, which just came across my desk from someone who is extremely close to the case:

From Justice Kennedy’s noting that the government is fundamentally transforming the relationship of the individual to the government, to Chief Justice Roberts’s concern that "all bets are off" if Congress can enact economic mandates, to Justice Alito’s invocation of a hypothetical burial-insurance mandate, to Justice Scalia’s focusing on the "proper" prong of the Necessary and Proper Clause – and grimacing throughout the solicitor general’s argument – it was a good day for those challenging the individual mandate. Paul Clement and Mike Carvin did a masterful job on that score, showing again and again the unprecedented and limitless nature of the government’s assertion of federal power. The solicitor general meanwhile, had a shaky opening and never could quite articulate the limiting principle to the government’s theory that at least four justices (and presumably the silent Justice Thomas) were seeking. While trying to predict Supreme Court decisions is a fool’s game, the wise should take note that if this morning’s argument is any indication, Obamacare is in constitutional trouble.

Adam Freedman

I loved Alito's question about burial insurance: a great example of everything the administration says is "unique" about healthcare.  Everyone will have to be buried or cremated, and if they don't leave enough assets to pay for it, the cost is "shifted" to the rest of society.  Why not force everyone to buy a plot at Happy Acres?

DocJay
Joined
Jul '11
DocJay

If this goes down, the GOP sure better come up with some solutions....but that is the 2016 election.

Douglas
Joined
Mar '11
Douglas
DocJay: If this goes down, the GOP sure better come up with some solutions....but that is the 2016 election. · 0 minutes ago

The serious solution, and the only proper action from Congress on this, is to bar states from forbidding the purchase of medical insurance across state lines. This is one case where states are trampling both on my rights as a consumer and on the Federal government's territory. They have no business telling me that my insurance can't be purchased from an out of state agency. There's no excuse for having fifty different Blue Cross agencies because they can't make one large one for the whole American insurance market because of various state regs barring that.

C. U. Douglas
Joined
Apr '11
C. U. Douglas

It all sounds good, but as a Scotch-Drinkin' Curmudgeon, I'm going to save celebration until we hear word.

Casey
Joined
Mar '11
Casey

 

Peter Robinson:ObamaCare delenda est. 

ante victoriam ne canas triumphum

(Pseudodionysius, did I get that right?)

TucsonSean
Joined
Jun '10
TucsonSean

the government created the uncompensated medical care market by compelling hospitals, etc. to treat evertybody whether they could pay or not.  If hospitals could turn down people without payment, there would be no uncompensated care problem, and ipso facto no "market." So the government has created a market that creates uncompensated care, and then creates the solution by forcing people to buy pre-paid insurance to avoid the uncompensated care problem.  I don't see how it can be upheld. 

Edited on March 27, 2012 at 9:58pm
Joseph Stanko
Joined
Jun '10
Joseph Stanko

Will the Court strike down just the mandate, or the whole act?  And if it kills the mandate, but leaves the rest in place, will that weaken opposition to Obamacare once the least-popular element is removed?

Steven Drexler
Joined
Sep '10
Steven Drexler

Douglas

DocJay: If this goes down, the GOP sure better come up with some solutions....but that is the 2016 election. · 0 minutes ago

The serious solution, and the only proper action from Congress on this, is to bar states from forbidding the purchase of medical insurance across state lines. This is one case where states are trampling both on my rights as a consumer and on the Federal government's territory. They have no business telling me that my insurance can't be purchased from an out of state agency. There's no excuse for having fifty different Blue Cross agencies because they can't make one large one for the whole American insurance market because of various state regs barring that. · 6 minutes ago

Well said, Douglas. But that's just the start. Healthcare is the most distorted market that I can think of, and it's not entirely government's fault. Billing and insurance reimbursements are rife with fraud and that kind of behavior needs to be brought into the sunlight, if not prosecurted.

Palaeologus
Joined
Jul '10
Palaeologus
Joseph Stanko: Will the Court strike down just the mandate, or the whole act?  And if it kills the mandate, but leaves the rest in place, will that weaken opposition to Obamacare once the least-popular element is removed? · 15 minutes ago

We aren't home yet on the mandate, Joseph. I believe tomorrow's arguments are about whether the mandate can be dumped all by itself.

As for the final question: maybe. But in that case, Obama will have a whole new series of cost estimates to deal with for the election. He'll have to pitch some kind of fix for that in his campaign.

Paul A. Rahe

Douglas

DocJay: If this goes down, the GOP sure better come up with some solutions....but that is the 2016 election. · 0 minutes ago

The serious solution, and the only proper action from Congress on this, is to bar states from forbidding the purchase of medical insurance across state lines. This is one case where states are trampling both on my rights as a consumer and on the Federal government's territory. They have no business telling me that my insurance can't be purchased from an out of state agency. There's no excuse for having fifty different Blue Cross agencies because they can't make one large one for the whole American insurance market because of various state regs barring that. · 45 minutes ago

Amen to that. If the problem is a lack of competition, the answer is a national market.

Paul A. Rahe

Palaeologus

Joseph Stanko: Will the Court strike down just the mandate, or the whole act?  And if it kills the mandate, but leaves the rest in place, will that weaken opposition to Obamacare once the least-popular element is removed? · 15 minutes ago

We aren't home yet on the mandate, Joseph. I believe tomorrow's arguments are about whether the mandate can be dumped all by itself.

As for the final question: maybe. But in that case, Obama will have a whole new series of cost estimates to deal with for the election. He'll have to pitch some kind of fix for that in his campaign. · 0 minutes ago

Single-payer, perhaps?

Joseph Stanko
Joined
Jun '10
Joseph Stanko

Paul A. Rahe

Palaeologus

Joseph Stanko: Will the Court strike down just the mandate, or the whole act?  And if it kills the mandate, but leaves the rest in place, will that weaken opposition to Obamacare once the least-popular element is removed? · 15 minutes ago

We aren't home yet on the mandate, Joseph. I believe tomorrow's arguments are about whether the mandate can be dumped all by itself.

As for the final question: maybe. But in that case, Obama will have a whole new series of cost estimates to deal with for the election. He'll have to pitch some kind of fix for that in his campaign. · 0 minutes ago

Single-payer, perhaps? · 1 minute ago

Exactly, that's what worries me.  I'm convinced that was the plan all along.

Wasn't the individual mandate there mainly to get the insurance companies on board?  It was supposed to make up for the ban on charging more for pre-existing conditions.  If the mandate is struck down, people can just wait until they get sick to buy insurance.  That will bankrupt the remaining private insurance firms, leaving the "public option" as the only option.

Palaeologus
Joined
Jul '10
Palaeologus

Joseph, you're right but the industry won't go bankrupt between June and November. If it's just the mandate that goes... I'm not exactly sure where that leaves us. But it does put a major crimp in his campaign. Whatever positive agenda he's pitching must take a back seat to re-arguing his unpopular, unconstitutional, signature achievement in altered form.

If that new form is single-payer, the GOP nominee ought to be  salivating. My bet is something more subtle like a tax credit instead of a penalty. Still, he doesn't want to have this same fight again, because it implies he hasn't accomplished anything.


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