The
Supreme Court said today it would take up a Republican challenge to the
Affordable Care Act.
The
court will hear the case in its new term, which begins in October. This means
that the ACA will continue for at least another year.
At
issue is a federal appeals court ruling in December that said the ACA’s
individual mandate is unconstitutional. But the case went back to the trial
judge for another look at whether the entire law is invalid or some parts can
survive.
Now
that the Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case, it will not go back to the
trial judge for that analysis. The justices will hear the case in the fall,
with a decision by June 2021, leaving the ACA still in place before the
November elections.
Since
the ACA was passed, opponents have attacked the individual mandate, which
requires all Americans to buy insurance or pay a penalty on their income tax.
The Supreme Court upheld the law in 2012, ruling that it was a legitimate
exercise of Congress's taxing authority.
But in
2017, the Republican-led Congress set the tax penalty at zero. That led Texas
and a group of Republican-led states to rule that the revised law is
unconstitutional. A federal judge in Texas agreed, ruling that because the tax
was eliminated, the law could not no longer be saved as a use of the taxing
power. In mid-December, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans
upheld that ruling by a 2-1 vote.
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