Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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Lord MJ
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Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articl ... ks_up.html

How the Court Case Against Obamacare Subsidies Stacks Up
By Sean Trende - October 29, 2013


Last week, the most important case that you've never heard of survived its first legal hurdle. Judge Paul Friedman of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that plaintiffs had standing to advance a broadside attack on the subsidy system at the heart of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, colloquially known as Obamacare.

Although the Clinton appointee refused the plaintiffs’ requests to temporarily enjoin -- that is, block -- the subsidies, he did so because there would be no harm to delaying an injunction until the conclusion of the case; he did not directly speak to the merits of the underlying claim (though he did note that both sides had made, in his view, credible cases). Friedman promised to rule by Feb. 15, and if he does enjoin the subsidies to the federal exchanges -- or if any judge in three other pending cases does so -- the law might well prove unworkable.


The challenge revolves around three provisions in the Affordable Care Act. Section 1311 of the law establishes state insurance exchanges. It provides, in part, that “[e]ach State shall . . . establish an American Health Benefit Exchange . . . for the State.”

Of course, Congress can’t actually force states to take such a step, as that would be an unconstitutional commandeering of state governments. While the administration believed that all states would eventually create these marketplaces, the ACA nevertheless provides a backstop in case that didn’t happen: Section 1321 specifies that “the Secretary [of Health and Human Services] shall . . . establish and operate such Exchange within the State and the Secretary shall take such actions as are necessary to implement such other requirements.”

A related provision deals with the calculation and payment of insurance subsidies. To cushion the blow of the individual mandate to purchase coverage and pay for associated increased costs, the ACA includes “premium assistance” for lower-income taxpayers. These subsidies are available to people whose plans “were enrolled in through an Exchange established by the State under section 1311 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.”

If you’ve been reading carefully, you can see the problem. By its plain text, the ACA only provides for subsidies for people enrolled in an exchange that was (a) established by the state and (b) established under section 1311. (In case you were wondering, the law defines “State” as “each of the 50 States and the District of Columbia.”) This is the argument, in a nutshell, of those bringing the lawsuit. If you live in, say, Oklahoma, which didn’t set up an exchange, the ACA doesn’t appear to offer a mechanism for you to receive any subsidies.

If you’re an opponent of Obamacare, you’re probably nodding along vigorously. This case is made all the stronger because we’re talking about a congressional appropriation, and appropriations have to be expressly made by Congress under the Constitution.

But if you’re a supporter of Obamacare, you’re probably saying, “Oh, come on! It’s pretty clear Congress wanted everyone to get the subsidies.” That, in a nutshell, is the government’s response. The IRS therefore set forth a rule that extended the subsidies to those enrolled in a “State Exchange, regional Exchange, subsidiary Exchange, [or] a Federally-facilitated Exchange.”

The government has defended this rule by arguing that section 1321 instructs the head of HHS to implement “such Exchange” when faced with a recalcitrant state. The word “such,” in this telling, means that an exchange established under section 1321 is for all intents and purposes the same as one established under section 1311.

It’s probably the strongest argument the government can make, but it runs into three problems. First, it is tough to argue that if, say, Kentucky suddenly cancelled its (well-functioning) exchange, that healthcare.gov would be the same as the Kentucky operation; users of the two systems would almost certainly disagree. Second, the federal exchange is still authorized under section 1321 of the Act, not section 1311. (With that said, the use of “such” does connote unity, so a court might determine that the federal exchanges are actually authorized under section 1311; there’s enough ambiguity here that this might be the most natural reading.)

But a final problem remains: Even if you accept that the federal exchange is really just the exchange set up under section 1311, the statute still specifies that the subsidies are only available to exchanges established by a state. This is a tough one for the government to get around, since courts will generally (though not always) balk at construing a statute in such a way that effectively eliminates words from that statute. Additionally, the fact that Congress at other points in the law used broader language, referring to exchanges “established under this Act,” suggests that Congress knew how to write broader language if it wanted to.

In a brief responding to the lawsuit, the government also sets forth examples of provisions of the ACA that would be superfluous or nonsensical if a court adopted the plaintiffs’ interpretation of the law. The government here is drawing upon the legal principle that laws must be construed as a whole, and that the court should avoid interpreting a section of a statute in a way that renders a different section non-functioning (of course, this presumes there's some ambiguity in the section being interpreted).

Without getting too far into the weeds, I’ll just note that plaintiffs argue that these provisions are neither superfluous nor nonsensical, and that, in any event, this isn’t an excuse for ignoring the plain, unambiguous language of the ACA.

Finally, the government argues that nothing in the law’s legislative history suggests that it intended to set up two different subsidy schemes, while plaintiffs assert that the government’s own arguments suggest that this is precisely what was intended. The government points to the House-passed bill, which provided for a federal exchange with a waiver provision for states, and which provided subsidies for both sorts of exchanges. But plaintiffs note that the Senate purposely took a different approach, with state exchanges operating as the default mechanism. As an inducement for states to create such an exchange, they argue, Congress gave them subsidies that aren’t present on a federal exchange. It’s not necessarily the most compelling argument, but it is plausible; one influential health care expert had suggested just such a “carrot/stick” for states in early 2009. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus seemed to express awareness of the dichotomy in a committee hearing in late 2009, using it as a basis for asserting jurisdiction over a related issue. Moreover, many -- though not all, and perhaps even not most -- jurists won’t look to legislative intent if there is unambiguous language, which takes us back to step one.

If this were any other law, I’d actually be fairly confident that the court would rule for the plaintiffs and leave it to Congress to fix the language if it wanted to. At bottom, the government is asking the courts to take the language “established by the State” and interpret it to mean “or by the federal government.” That’s significant, especially in the context of an appropriation.

But this isn’t just any law, as we saw in 2012. In the wake of the National Federation of Independent Business case upholding the ACA, lower courts may be wary of weakening the law. At the same time, though, this case is in a different posture than NFIB. In that one, plaintiffs were asking the court to invalidate as unconstitutional the most significant piece of social legislation in two generations on something of a technicality. Chief Justice Roberts took the long-standing proposition that the court should avoid striking down legislation as unconstitutional, examined the individual mandate, said that it looked like a tax, and called it a tax.


Here, plaintiffs may get some more wiggle room because they aren’t challenging the constitutionality of the law, nor are they asking a court to be “activist” in its rulemaking. They are asking for a reasonably straightforward application of canons of statutory construction. Perhaps more importantly, the court would leave the door open for Congress to implement a fix, if it wants.

Here’s where the proponents of the suit may be too clever by half. It’s assumed that, if the courts block the subsidies for people on the federal exchange, Republicans will dig in, the government will have to declare hardship exemptions from the mandate for those who can’t afford insurance without subsidies, and that the framework will collapse.

But a different approach is at least as plausible: This is an election year, and Democrats will likely mount a full-bore assault on state legislators, governors, and congressmen in states without exchanges. The arguments would almost write themselves: Why won’t you let people in our state have the same benefits that people get in New York? Why won’t you set up a marketplace where our citizens could get insurance for one-tenth the price? I’m not sure such a campaign would be as unsuccessful as a lot of Republicans imagine.

In the end, the Supreme Court is not going to be eager to wade into another ACA case. It will probably have to be forced in. For that to happen, one of the courts of appeals is probably going to have to rule in the plaintiffs’ favor. Three of the four cases are actually in reasonably good circuits for such a ruling to occur: Only three of 10 judges on the 7th Circuit is a Democratic appointee; only five of 10 on the 10th Circuit is a Democratic appointee; and only four of eight on the D.C. Circuit is a Democratic appointee (and one of those clerked for Republican-appointed Justice Sandra Day O’Connor).

If the case does get to the Supreme Court, I’d actually give it better chances of succeeding than I would have given the original ACA challenge. The law really did present novel questions, and operated in the hinterlands of Commerce Clause and cooperative federalism jurisprudence. I could have seen, to widely varying degrees, any of the justices (with the exception of Clarence Thomas) voting to uphold it. On the other hand, this case deals with some well-established canons of statutory construction; there are almost certainly four liberal votes in favor of the government’s position, and three conservative votes opposed to it. Anthony Kennedy was willing to strike down the whole law wholesale to begin with, and Roberts voted to uphold it only reluctantly. Faced with creating a national precedent and the language of this statute, I would not be surprised if this time they rejected the government’s position -- though I wouldn’t be surprised if they accepted it, either. If the former happens, the current fights over the ACA website will likely seem like child’s play compared to what follows.

On first reading, it does seem that plaintiffs have a pretty solid case in that subsidies apply only to state established exchanges, and not healthcare.gov.

If this goes through, I think we'll just have to give up on the idea of having Universal Health Care in the US. What is the likelihood that we will have the perfect storm of a Democratic President, and Democratic controlled both houses of congress to attempt this again. All over four simple words.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

Post by Gaidin »

It's got a better shot than the original case I think since they're not trying to play Constitutional Crisis with it if the article's interpretation is correct. Of course, again, if the article's got it right, it give's state minority parties an amusing opportunity to play hell with accusing the majority party for screwing with the people just for party politics.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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Lord MJ wrote:On first reading, it does seem that plaintiffs have a pretty solid case in that subsidies apply only to state established exchanges, and not healthcare.gov.

If this goes through, I think we'll just have to give up on the idea of having Universal Health Care in the US. What is the likelihood that we will have the perfect storm of a Democratic President, and Democratic controlled both houses of congress to attempt this again. All over four simple words.
Why? Obamacare isn't going away. It's extremely difficult to repeal a law once it's on the books. It can be weakened, like this particular ruling is in favor the plaintiffs, but all that does is strengthen the argument for states to establish exchanges. I'm sure many conservative states won't, at least immediately, but they'll only be able to hold out for so long before their constituencies start agitating for them to grant them the same benefits and subsidies people in other states get.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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The issue is that right now Obamacare isn't very popular.

And this ruling will have immediate adverse effects on the population. Which means that either the states will need to set up exchanges, the law needs to be modified so that the Federal exchange counts for subsidies, or the law needs to be repealed. Given the electoral consequences for the Dems if this ruling goes in the plaintiffs favor. The likelihood of a modification or the states setting up exchanges in slim.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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Lord MJ wrote:The issue is that right now Obamacare isn't very popular.

And this ruling will have immediate adverse effects on the population. Which means that either the states will need to set up exchanges, the law needs to be modified so that the Federal exchange counts for subsidies, or the law needs to be repealed. Given the electoral consequences for the Dems if this ruling goes in the plaintiffs favor. The likelihood of a modification or the states setting up exchanges in slim.
Legally, why can't we just forge ahead without giving the population of those states with no 'state exchange' insurance subsidies? Why do we actually need to "... set up exchanges, the law needs to be modified so that the Federal exchange counts for subsidies, or the law needs to be repealed." Is there a legal reason we can't just drop the red states from 'universal health care'? It's what they want right?
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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People in red states have already signed up via Healthcare.gov with the new subsidies applied. If the subsidies are struck down, then suddenly they will be stuck with more expensive healthcare plans than they can afford. And the individual mandate still applies even if your state has not set up an exchange.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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Lord MJ wrote:People in red states have already signed up via Healthcare.gov with the new subsidies applied. If the subsidies are struck down, then suddenly they will be stuck with more expensive healthcare plans than they can afford. And the individual mandate still applies even if your state has not set up an exchange.
So what? They can cancel their insurance if they can't afford it and risk paying the penalty. I believe they could get a hardship exemption from the penalty too can't they? The end result is red states have lots of uninsured poor people, but blue states move on as normal. Is there something I'm missing that would legally force the overturning of the entire law?
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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Insurance companies will still be required to cover people with Preexisting conditions. Since the number of enrollees would decline, that would push premiums up. Also there is the politics of so many people losing their coverage. And the last time that issue came up, with people getting cancellation notices due to issues of how only plans from prior to 2010 get grandfathered in, while those between 2010 and 2013 did not, the Dems and Obama took a huge beating.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

Post by Nova Andromeda »

Lord MJ wrote:Insurance companies will still be required to cover people with Preexisting conditions. Since the number of enrollees would decline, that would push premiums up. Also there is the politics of so many people losing their coverage. And the last time that issue came up, with people getting cancellation notices due to issues of how only plans from prior to 2010 get grandfathered in, while those between 2010 and 2013 did not, the Dems and Obama took a huge beating.
So no legal reason then? I understand it would be more fuel on the political fire and that the red state insurance premiums may blow up if no solution is found, but that is a red state problem not a blue state problem.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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Lord MJ wrote:The issue is that right now Obamacare isn't very popular.
Now you're just getting into word games. Thanks to the publicity games of one side vs the other people actually uhh...prefer the ACA to Obamacare. And Obamacare isn't very popular, but people are liking the effects of the ACA. Seriously. :roll:
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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Lord MJ wrote:
...But this isn’t just any law, as we saw in 2012. In the wake of the National Federation of Independent Business case upholding the ACA, lower courts may be wary of weakening the law. At the same time, though, this case is in a different posture than NFIB. In that one, plaintiffs were asking the court to invalidate as unconstitutional the most significant piece of social legislation in two generations on something of a technicality. Chief Justice Roberts took the long-standing proposition that the court should avoid striking down legislation as unconstitutional, examined the individual mandate, said that it looked like a tax, and called it a tax.
...

On first reading, it does seem that plaintiffs have a pretty solid case in that subsidies apply only to state established exchanges, and not healthcare.gov.
This part of the quoted article seems very funny to me, because the argument cited is obviously a technicality:

"Federal subsidies apply to all insurance bought at an exchange covered under Clause 1311. BUT some states refused to set up an exchange under 1311, so the federal government set up exchanges under Clause 1321. But CLEARLY federal subsidies do not apply to these non-1311 exchanges!"

Which is pretty much what the argument comes down to. The intent of the law is obvious, the technicality only even arose because of obstructionism and noncompliance on the states' parts.

So for this guy to say that this is not a legal technicality strikes me as laughable.
Lord MJ wrote:The issue is that right now Obamacare isn't very popular.

And this ruling will have immediate adverse effects on the population. Which means that either the states will need to set up exchanges, the law needs to be modified so that the Federal exchange counts for subsidies, or the law needs to be repealed. Given the electoral consequences for the Dems if this ruling goes in the plaintiffs favor. The likelihood of a modification or the states setting up exchanges in slim.
For one, there is no actual threat to the ACA here- only a threat to the ability of poor people in fanatically right-wing states to get the affordable care promised them by the Act... a problem they only have because their state governments are jackasses.

Even if there were such a threat, I find it very improbable that the Democrats will suffer more from "Affordable Care Act defeated!" than the Republicans will suffer for having gone to such great lengths in order to defeat it.

Prestige is all very well, but on some level, "beating the ACA" means telling millions of Americans that much-needed relief in the form of affordable health insurance was cut off by some jackass and his well-paid attorneys.

They are not apt to respond well to that announcement.

And I doubt that they are all stupid enough to blame the Democrats, when the Republicans have been throwing in everything but the kitchen sink to ensure the ACA didn't pass, or wasn't implemented, or was destroyed before it could take real effect.

It's like, if the Democrats pass the Mom and Apple Pie Act, and the Republicans defeat it, that doesn't mean the Republicans gain more by the prestige of taking down a big target than they lose by coming out as opposed to mom and apple pie.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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The Halbig v. Sebelius case has been on going for a while and is well known (outside of conservatives fevered imaginations) to be bullshit.

http://balkin.blogspot.com/2012/11/the- ... lenge.html
...

Cannon and Adler's argument, taken up by Oklahoma in its lawsuit, is deeply flawed as a matter of law. Their basic argument is this: In Cannon's words, the provision of the ACA that establishes premium tax credits "explicitly and laboriously restricts tax credits to those who buy health insurance in Exchanges 'established by the State under section 1311.' There is no parallel language – none whatsoever – granting eligibility through Exchanges established by the federal government (section 1321)."

But that is not quite right. Although the tax-credit provision twice uses the phrase "Exchange established by the State under section 1311," see 26 U.S.C. § 36B(b)(2)(A), (c)(2)(A)(i), that phrase does not have the exclusionary meaning Cannon attributes to it. That is because Section 1321 (codified at 42 U.S.C. § 18041) makes clear that, when a state fails to set up an exchange, the federally-operated exchange will stand in the shoes of the state exchange for purposes of Section 1311. Thus, Section 1311 provides that "[e]ach State shall" set up an exchange by January 1, 2014. 42 U.S.C. § 18031(b)(1). Section 1321 provides that if a state "will not have any required Exchange operational" by then -- that is, an exchange required by Section 1311 -- then the federal government "shall (directly or through agreement with a not-for-profit entity) establish and operate such Exchange within the State." 42 U.S.C. § 18041(c)(1) (emphasis added). "uch Exchange" in Section 1321 clearly refers to the "required exchange" -- that is, the Section 1311 exchange. When the federal government operates an exchange pursuant to Section 1321, then, it is not operating some wholly foreign entity; it is operating the state exchange that Section 1311 required the state to set up but that the state failed to create. Because Section 1321 provides that a federally-operated exchange will stand in the shoes of a state-operated exchange created by Section 1311, there is no basis for denying participants in federally-operated exchanges the same tax credits obtained by participants in state-operated exchanges.

The IRS's interpretation of the ACA to extend premium subsidies to participants in both state- and federally-operated exchanges thus seems to me not merely a permissible one but also the most plausible reading of the statutory text. Nor is there any reason to think that Congress would have intended to treat participants in state- and federally-operated exchanges differently for purposes of obtaining the subsidies. In both state- and federally-operated exchanges, the subsidies serve the same crucial role in achieving the statute's goal of expanded, affordable health coverage. If you take the subsidies away from participants in either sort of exchange, the law's protections are likely to unravel in the same way.

Cannon argues, though, that Congress did intend to draw a distinction between state- and federally-operated exchanges for these purposes. But his arguments are red herrings. First, Cannon argues that "n order to have state-run Exchanges, the bill needed some way to encourage states to create them without 'commandeering' the states," and that offering premium subsidies limited to states that set up their own exchanges was a means to overcome the commandeering problem. But anyone who understands the Supreme Court's commandeering doctrine knows that the premium subsidies were not at all necessary to overcome any commandeering problem. The anticommandeering principle forbids Congress from compelling the states to regulate private parties, but it permits Congress to give the states the choice between regulating private parties according to federal standards and standing aside to allow the federal government to regulate those parties directly. That's the Court's square holding in New York v. United States. And that, of course, is the precise choice that the ACA gave states even without the subsidies -- regulate individuals and insurance companies through state-operated exchanges, or stand aside and let the federal government set up and operate exchanges of its own. So there is no reason to attribute to Congress a decision to limit subsidies to participants in state-operated exchanges in order to overcome any commandeering problem. Once the federal government could set up its own exchanges, there was no commandeering problem.

Second, Cannon adverts to the limited jurisdiction of the Senate Finance Committee: "The Finance Committee had even more reason to condition tax credits on state compliance: it doesn’t have direct jurisdiction over health insurance. Conditioning the tax credits on state compliance was the only way the Committee could even consider legislation directing states to establish Exchanges." But there is nothing in the Finance Committee's jurisdiction that required it to limit tax subsidies to participants in state-operated exchanges. Legislation that extended premium tax credits to participants in any exchange, whether state- or federally-operated, was fully within the Committee's jurisdiction. And, as I have argued above, that is precisely the legislation that Congress passed.

Whatever its value to conservative activists and those who wish to relitigate NFIB and the election, the rearguard effort to undermine Obamacare is deeply flawed as a matter of law.


http://www.cbpp.org/cms/index.cfm?fa=view&id=3803

Some health reform opponents claim that the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA) premium tax credits to help low- and moderate-income uninsured people buy coverage through the new health insurance exchanges are only available in states that have set up their own exchanges, not in states with federally operated exchanges. A group of Republican members of Congress led by Representative Michele Bachmann (R-MN) and Senator Jim DeMint (R-SC) have urged governors to forgo establishing their own exchanges on this ground in order to undermine ACA implementation and thus assist their efforts to repeal health reform.[1]

The argument that premium credits are not available to purchase coverage offered through a federally operated exchange rests on a distorted and incorrect reading of the ACA.

Section 1321 of the ACA says that if a state elects not to establish its own exchange or will not be ready to operate its exchange in 2014, “the Secretary shall (directly or through agreement with a not-for-profit entity) establish and operate such Exchange within the State and the Secretary shall take such actions as are necessary to implement such other requirements” (emphasis added).[2] In other words, the federal government will stand in the shoes of a state that elects not to operate an exchange by establishing and operating the exchange on the state’s behalf. [3]


Section 36B of the Internal Revenue Code, which was added to the Code by section 1401 of the ACA, specifically refers to federal exchanges in requiring all exchanges — state and federally operated — to report to the federal government on the amount of advance payments of premium credits that taxpayers receive. That provision would make absolutely no sense if people purchasing coverage through a federally operated exchange were not eligible for the credits.


If premium credits were not available in states with federally operated exchanges, residents of such states would not qualify for help buying coverage in the exchange, while residents of states establishing their own exchanges wouldqualify. This would clearly be inconsistent with the purpose of the health reform law, which is to ensure that all Americans have a path to affordable coverage regardless of where they live. As Chief Justice Roberts noted in referring to the ACA’s Medicaid expansion, the exchanges are “an element of a comprehensive national plan to provide universal health insurance coverage.”[4]


The Treasury Department has specifically rejected the argument that people buying coverage through a federally operated exchange are not eligible for premium credits. A court considering this question would almost certainly defer to the Treasury interpretation.


Federal Exchange Is the State Exchange in States Not Establishing Their Own Exchange

Section 1311 of the ACA calls for states to establish health insurance exchanges to serve as marketplaces for individuals and small businesses to purchase health coverage. So far, 34 states and the District of Columbia have received federal grants to establish exchanges.[5]

To make health insurance more affordable for low- and moderate-income people, the ACA provides that citizens and legal immigrants with incomes between 100 and 400 percent of the poverty line who are not eligible for Medicaid or Medicare and don’t have an offer of employer coverage can receive premium tax credits to help them buy insurance offered in the exchange. The premium tax credits are payable in advance on a monthly basis directly to insurers. At the end of the year, the IRS determines the final premium tax credit for which a household qualified, based on its annual income.[6]

Exchanges will determine whether people are eligible for advance payments of the credit and the amount of the monthly payment to their health plan. Those who are eligible can receive help paying premiums in “coverage months” during which they are enrolled in health plans offered in an exchange. A month is a “coverage month” if a taxpayer, spouse, or dependent was enrolled that month in a plan “through an Exchange established by the State.”[7]

Not all states will set up their own exchanges. Although states have until November to declare their intent to establish an exchange, several governors have already said they will not establish an exchange.[8]

Congress anticipated that some states would forgo setting up their own exchange or might not be ready to begin operations on January 1, 2014 as required. The ACA thus includes a fallback so that all eligible people can have access to affordable coverage, regardless of where they live. Under section 1321 of the ACA, if a state elects not to establish its own exchange or will not be ready to operate its exchange in 2014, “the Secretary shall (directly or through agreement with a not-for-profit entity) establish and operate such Exchange within the State and the Secretary shall take such actions as are necessary to implement such other requirements.”[9]

In other words, if a state elects not to operate an exchange, the federal government will establish and operate the exchange on the state’s behalf.

Despite this language directing the Secretary to establish “such Exchange within the State” and to take actions necessary to implement “such other requirements,” critics of health reform have seized on the reference in section 36B of the Internal Revenue Code to an exchange “established by the State” in the definition of a coverage month. This reference, they contend, means that individuals in states with a federal exchange cannot qualify for premium tax credits.[10]

However, the Treasury Department flatly rejected this claim when it adopted final regulations to implement the ACA, explaining that the ACA’s legislative history, structure, and purpose all make clear that premium tax credits are available to taxpayers who obtain coverage in a federally operated exchange:

The statutory language of section 36B and other provisions of the Affordable Care Act support the interpretation that credits are available to taxpayers who obtain coverage through a State Exchange, regional Exchange, subsidiary Exchange, and the Federally-facilitated Exchange. Moreover, the relevant legislative history does not demonstrate that Congress intended to limit the premium tax credits to State Exchanges. Accordingly, the final regulations maintain the rule in the proposed regulations because it is consistent with the language, purpose, and structure of section 36B and the Affordable Care Act as a whole.[11]

Not only does section 1321 indicate that a federally operated exchange is the exchange established by the state in a state electing not to operate its own exchange directly, but section 36B of the Internal Revenue Code specifically refers to federal exchanges in requiring all exchanges — state and federally operated — to report to the federal government on the amount of advance payments of premium credits that taxpayers receive. That provision would make no sense if people purchasing coverage through a federally operated exchange weren’t eligible for the credits and clearly demonstrates Congressional intent that the tax credits be available in all states regardless of which level of government is operating the exchange.

Even if section 36B did not include federally operated exchanges in its discussion of premium credits, the argument limiting the payment of credits to state exchanges would still lack credibility because it ignores the ACA’s overall design and structure. If premium tax credits were not available in states with a federal exchange, low- and moderate-income residents of Louisiana, Texas, Maine, and other states would receive no help buying health coverage, while residents of Colorado, Nevada, Maryland, and other states establishing their own exchanges would receive assistance. This would be inconsistent with the purpose of the health reform law, which is to ensure that all Americans have a path to affordable coverage regardless of where they live.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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And looks like a federal appeals court has ruled against Obamacare here.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/poli ... /12482127/

WASHINGTON -- A federal appeals court dealt a potentially major blow to President Obama's health care law Tuesday, ruling that participants in health exchanges run by the federal government in 34 states are not eligible for tax subsidies.

The 2-1 ruling by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, which is sure to be appealed by the government, threatens the framework of the health care system for about 5 million Americans without employer-provided health plans.

The case, filed by a coalition of states, employers and individuals, had been considered a long shot effort to derail the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare. Federal district judges in the District of Columbia and Virginia previously had ruled for the government. Three similar cases remain pending.

The appeals panel ruled that as written, the health care law allows tax credits to be offered to qualified participants only in state-run exchanges. The administration had expected most if not all states to create their own, but only 16 states did so.

The court said the Internal Revenue Service went too far in allowing participants in other states served by the federal exchange to qualify for billions of dollars in government assistance. The aid has helped boost enrollment figures to more than 8 million.

"We reach this conclusion, frankly, with reluctance," Judge Thomas Griffith said. "At least until states that wish to can set up exchanges, our ruling will likely have significant consequences both for the millions of individuals receiving tax credits through federal exchanges and for health insurance markets more broadly."

The problem for supporters of Obamacare is that a majority of states purposely did not set up health exchanges because their governors and legislatures objected to the law. So it's not likely they will rush to do so now.

As a result, the only way to save subsidies for millions of health exchange customers may be to appeal the decision -- either to the full appellate court, which now contains a majority of judges named by Democratic presidents following four recent Obama appointments, or to the Supreme Court.

Judge Harry Edwards dissented, calling the challenge "a not-so-veiled attempt to gut the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act" and warning that the panel's ruling "portends disastrous consequences."

If allowed to stand, the ruling would blow a major hole in the law, since tax credits or subsidies are what make the private health insurance policies offered on the exchanges affordable to most Americans without employer-sponsored insurance plans.

If the subsidies are invalidated in 34 states, then many of the tax penalties imposed on employers and individuals for non-compliance with the law also would be eliminated. Employers pay a penalty when their workers get subsidized on the exchange. Individuals get penalized if they don't buy affordable insurance, but the subsidies often are what make it affordable.

Michael Cannon, a Cato Institute health economist who helped devise the legal challenge, said the refusal by so many states to create health exchanges led to the court ruling. "This is popular resistance to the law," he said.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

Post by Edi »

Even if the subsidies are struck down permanently, there is nothing to prevent the Democrats from putting on a full court media press on the Republicans.

"They did not set up state exchanges because they wanted to sabotage the law. When the federal government stepped into the breach, they brought the lawsuit because they didn't want you to have healthcare you can afford. Republicans took away your healthcare."

I'm certain that whatever PR companies would be used for this purpose could craft these things into very effective media campaigns and there is absolutely no reason why the Democrats should refrain from doing so. They need to learn that once it comes to media issues, even if they get what they want in negotiations or legislation, they should not let up on the attacks and if the Republicans fall down on some mistake, that's not the time to extend a hand to help them up but to kick them twice as hard while they are down.

It's what the conservatives have been doing for 20 years now and Obama, failure as he has been in terms of capitulating on most issues, should have wised up by now.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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The 4th circuit court in Virginia came down with the opposite ruling on the same day. They unanimously upheld the ability of the IRS to give the tax credit.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

Post by Dalton »

Edi wrote:It's what the conservatives have been doing for 20 years now and Obama, failure as he has been in terms of capitulating on most issues, should have wised up by now.
I think you mean "capitalizing", not "capitulating". In any case a smart Democrat will use this to their advantage in the midterms. Let's hope they aren't led down some bizarre path by a party more savvy at bullshitting people.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

Post by Elheru Aran »

Block wrote:The 4th circuit court in Virginia came down with the opposite ruling on the same day. They unanimously upheld the ability of the IRS to give the tax credit.
So in this case, who has precedence?
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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The law will stand until it comes before the Supreme court from my understanding. If they choose not to hear the case I think it defaults to being upheld, unless they're challenging separate parts of the same case.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

Post by RogueIce »

Elheru Aran wrote:
Block wrote:The 4th circuit court in Virginia came down with the opposite ruling on the same day. They unanimously upheld the ability of the IRS to give the tax credit.
So in this case, who has precedence?
Neither, IIRC. It just means that, until/unless a higher level of appeals weighs in, the subsidies are invalid in areas covered by the DC Circuit while being valid in areas covered by the 4th Circuit.

Although in the case of such a circuit split that usually means SCOTUS will indeed take the case in order to settle the issue, rather than leaving it as a patchwork.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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Dalton wrote:
Edi wrote:It's what the conservatives have been doing for 20 years now and Obama, failure as he has been in terms of capitulating on most issues, should have wised up by now.
I think you mean "capitalizing", not "capitulating". In any case a smart Democrat will use this to their advantage in the midterms. Let's hope they aren't led down some bizarre path by a party more savvy at bullshitting people.
I have a funny feeling though that instead of using this to their advantage, Dems will start to distance themselves from Obamacare.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

Post by Edi »

Dalton wrote:
Edi wrote:It's what the conservatives have been doing for 20 years now and Obama, failure as he has been in terms of capitulating on most issues, should have wised up by now.
I think you mean "capitalizing", not "capitulating". In any case a smart Democrat will use this to their advantage in the midterms. Let's hope they aren't led down some bizarre path by a party more savvy at bullshitting people.
Obama has a good track record of capitulating on most important points of most important issues and signally failing to capitalize on them. I sort of managed to mix my metaphors there, which is what a missing comma and a slightly wrongly chosen wording caused to do.

I need to pay more attention to what I write...
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

Post by Block »

Apparently the administration has requested that the full 11 members of the DC appeals court hear the case rather than just the 3 person panel, and they, as a whole, lean much more liberal than the panel. So it may not get to the Supreme Court.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

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Block wrote:Apparently the administration has requested that the full 11 members of the DC appeals court hear the case rather than just the 3 person panel, and they, as a whole, lean much more liberal than the panel. So it may not get to the Supreme Court.
What prevents the plaintiffs from appealing to SCOTUS when the full panels votes in the defendants' favour?
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

Post by Block »

Nothing, but if both Circuit courts agree on the ruling in the end, the Supreme Court is likely to not want to take the case.
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Re: Next Court Case to Doom Obamacare?

Post by Omega18 »

UnderAGreySky wrote:What prevents the plaintiffs from appealing to SCOTUS when the full panels votes in the defendants' favour?
Nothing, although the court might be slightly more likely to rule for Obamacare if both rulings that actually reach the court are in its favor.

It also gives justices on the court a way to leave Obamacare in place without having to actually issue a ruling. (Justice Roberts in particular might prefer this option, especially since conservative circles will certainly take issue with the details of his ruling if he sides with the administration in an opinion on this issue as well.)
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