The Trump
administration said Thursday night that it will not defend the Affordable Care
Act against the latest legal challenge to its constitutionality — a dramatic
break from the executive branch’s tradition of arguing to uphold existing
statutes and a land mine for health insurance changes the ACA brought about.
In a brief filed in a
Texas federal court and an accompanying letter to
the House and Senate leaders of both parties, the Justice Department agrees in
large part with the 20 Republican-led states that brought the suit. They
contend that the ACA provision requiring most Americans to carry health
insurance soon will no longer be constitutional and that, as a result, consumer
insurance protections under the law will not be valid, either.
The three-page letter
from Attorney General Jeff Sessions begins by saying that Justice adopted its
position “with the approval of the President of the United States.” The letter
acknowledges that the decision not to defend an existing law deviates from
history but contends that it is not unprecedented.
The bold swipe at the
ACA, a Republican whipping post since its 2010 passage, does not immediately
affect any of its provisions. But it puts the law on far more wobbly legal
footing in the case, which is being heard by a GOP-appointed judge who has in
other recent cases ruled against more minor aspects.
The administration
does not go as far as the Texas attorney general and his counterparts. In their
suit, lodged in February in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District
of Texas, they argue that the entire law is now invalid.
By contrast, the
Justice brief and letter say many other aspects of the law can survive because
they can be considered legally distinct from the insurance mandate and such
consumer protections as a
A group of 17
Democratic-led states that have won standing in the case also filed a brief on
Thursday night arguing for the ACA’s preservation.
While the case has to
play out from here, the administration’s striking position raises the
possibility that major parts of the law could be struck down — a year after the
Republican Congress failed at attempts to repeal core
provisions.
In an unusual filing
just before 6 p.m. Thursday, when the brief was due, the three career Justice
attorneys involved in the case — Joel McElvain, Eric Beckenhauer and Rebecca Kopplin
— withdrew.
The department’s
argument, if adopted by U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor, “would be
breathtaking in its effect,’ said Timothy Jost, a retired Washington and Lee
law professor who follows such litigation closely. “Of all of the actions the
Trump administration has taken to undermine individual insurance markets, this
may be the most destabilizing. . . .
[If] I’m an insurer, I don’t know what I am supposed to do or not.”
Jost, an ACA
supporter, noted that the administration’s decision not to defend the law comes
during the season when participating insurers must file their rates for next
year with state regulators. It raises new questions about whether insurers
still will be required to charge the same prices to all customers, healthy or sick.
And Topher Spiro,
vice president of health policy at the liberal Center for American Progress,
said the administration’s legal argument contradicts promises by Trump that he
would not tamper with the ACA’s protections for people with preexisting medical
conditions.
University of
Michigan law professor Nicholas Bagley, another ACA defender, went even further
in a blog post. “If the Justice Department can just throw in the towel whenever
a law is challenged in court, it can effectively pick and choose which laws
should remain on the books,” he wrote. “That’s not a rule of law I recognize. That’s a rule by whim. And it scares me.”
Crusading against the
ACA has been a priority of Trump’s since his campaign for the White House. On
his first night in office, Trump issued an executive order, directing federal
agencies to lighten the regulatory burden placed by the law. Last October, the president unilaterally ended a significant part
of the law that cushions insurers financially from an obligation to give
discounts to decrease out-of-pocket costs to lower-income customers with ACA
coverage.
More recently, the
White House and Department of Health and Human Services have been working to make it easier for consumers to buy
relatively inexpensive health plans that exclude some of the benefits the ACA
requires.
The new challenge
comes six years after the Supreme Court’s divided ruling that the ACA is
constitutional. That ruling hinged on the reasoning that, while the government
“does not have the power to order people to buy health insurance,” as Chief
Justice John G. Roberts Jr. wrote for the majority, it “does have the power to
impose a tax on those without health insurance.”
The case in Texas, which has attracted relatively little notice until now, emerges
from the massive tax bill Congress passed late last year. In that, lawmakers
decided to eliminate the tax penalty the ACA requires people to pay if they
flout the insurance mandate. The enforcement of that requirement will end in
January.
As a result, the
Texas lawsuit contends, “the country is left with an individual mandate to buy
health insurance that lacks any constitutional basis. . . .
Once the heart of the ACA —
the individual mandate — is declared
unconstitutional, the remainder of the ACA must also fall.”
Texas and the
accompanying states have asked for a preliminary injunction that could suspend
the entire law while the case plays out in court.
But the
administration disagrees with that position. Instead, Justice officials argue
in their brief that the ACA’s insurance requirement will not become
unconstitutional until January, so that “the injury imposed by the individual
mandate is not sufficiently imminent” and that the judge could issue a final
ruling in the case before then.
O’Connor, who is
hearing the suit, was appointed by President George W. Bush and has ruled
against the ACA in other cases the past few years.
Until Thursday’s
filing, the Trump administration had not indicated its position on either this
latest lawsuit or the Republican states’ effort to block the law while the case
moved along.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/trump-administration-wont-defend-aca-in-cases-brought-by-gop-states/2018/06/07/92f56e86-6a9c-11e8-9e38-24e693b38637_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_campaign=6393868531-Daily%20Dish%206-8-18&utm_medium=email&utm_source=American%20Action%20Forum%20Emails&utm_term=.eb78deb4e705
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