by Leslie Small
Although a constitutional challenge to the Affordable Care Act
(ACA) has been winding its way through the court system for more than two
years, the Supreme Court during a Nov. 10 hearing appeared highly skeptical
that the case has much merit.
The suit California
v. Texas was first brought by a Texas-led coalition of conservative
states in 2018. It argues that the ACA's individual mandate — which compels
people to purchase health insurance — is unconstitutional because Congress
removed the mandate's tax penalty via a budget bill in 2017. And if that
mandate is unconstitutional, the suit claims, so is the rest of the law.
In interviews with AIS Health following the Nov. 10 oral
arguments, experts say they were intrigued to find that a significant portion
of justices' questions centered on whether the Texas-led coalition of states
even had the right to bring its lawsuit — a legal question known as standing.
Joel Ario, managing director of Manatt Health, points out that
justices seemed to favor the term "inoperative provision" when
describing the mandate — meaning they were skeptical that states could be
harmed by a requirement that carried no penalty for noncompliance.
"I think ultimately, given the tenor of the questions, they
will find [that the states have] standing, but the bulk of the argument was
discussing the standing issue," says Bill Jordan, a partner and co-leader
of Alston & Bird’s Health Care Litigation Group. "So we've been
describing it to clients as, 'expect the decision to kind of be a nothingburger.
The Affordable Care Act will survive and we'll go on.'"
Even if the court rules that the states have standing to sue and
agrees that the individual mandate is unconstitutional, both Ario and Jordan
say they expect the rest of the ACA to remain intact, citing the fact that
right-leaning Justice Brett Kavanaugh and Chief Justice John Roberts expressed
skepticism about the mandate being inseverable from the rest of the law.
Citi analyst Ralph Giacobbe noted that health care stocks rose
following the hearing, an unsurprising outcome since "this case would
clear a big hurdle in being the 'last' overhang for the sector among recent
headlines/fears." Still, "we acknowledge that oral arguments are not
a perfect indicator of how the justices may eventually rule," Giacobbe
added.
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