Wednesday, September 5, 2018
Next: The Affordable Care Act Back to the Supreme Court
The
Republican Party, minus the effective veto-against-repeal from the most
honorable GOP Senator of the lot – the late great John McCain, who really cared
about average Americans – has done everything in their power to gut the ACA. Like:
Judicial attacks that successfully undercut the core funding mechanism for the
entire program (the “individual mandate”) even though Supreme Court Chief
Justice John Roberts, writing the majority opinion in the 2012 King vs Burwell case, otherwise upheld
the ACA. Or the litany of Donald Trump executive orders or his administration’s
agency rulings undermining the very core of the ACA, creating exemptions and
interpretations of the act that decimate its most essential provisions. Or the
new GOP bill pending in Congress that would prevent an insurance company from denying
insurance coverage to people with preexisting medical conditions but would
otherwise not require that same insurance carrier actually to cover treatment
for such preexisting conditions. See also my August 29th blog, The Explosive Legacy of O’Bomb-a-Care.
As
the Trump administration is attempting to push the appointment of Brett
Kavanaugh to replace the retired Anthony Kennedy as Supreme Court Associate
Justice, there’s a general sentiment that while Kavanaugh might not rule that
the entire ACA is unconstitutional, he is going to have plenty of opportunities
to push a conservative court to vitiate some of its most essential provisions.
Here are the seminal cases, wending their way up the federal appellate ladder, that
just could further undercut the ACA, perhaps even forcing a reevaluation of Roe v Wade (Italics below represent
descriptions from the September 1st Los Angeles Times):
Texas vs. Azar Twenty Republican
governors and attorneys general are seeking to invalidate the entire healthcare
law. They argue that the law no longer can work since last year Congress
eliminated a penalty on those who lack health coverage.
Stewart vs. Azar A group of low-income
residents of Kentucky challenged the Trump administration’s move to allow the
state to impose work requirements on enrollees in Kentucky’s Medicaid insurance
program.
New York vs. Acosta A group of 12
Democratic attorneys general are challenging a Trump administration regulation
issued this year that makes it easier for individuals and small employers to
band together to buy so-called association health plans that do not meet
standards set by the Affordable Care Act. They argue the administration is
violating the healthcare law’s aim of establishing minimum insurance
protections. This particularly focuses on so-called “skinny” healthcare
plans that limit or eliminate coverage and treatment for pre-existing
conditions.
West Alabama Women’s Center vs. Miller The
state of Alabama in 2016 passed a law barring a surgical technique known as
dilation and evacuation, or D&E, which is commonly used to end a pregnancy
in the second trimester. The ban was challenged in court by two abortion
providers in the state… Alabama is among several conservative states that in
recent years have passed new laws seeking to restrict access to abortion
services. Other tactics have included limits on Planned Parenthood funding and
additional licensing requirements for abortion providers. Some believe this
case could give the Supreme Court the opportunity to revisit the broader issue
of abortion rights set out by the court in its landmark 1973 Roe vs. Wade
decision.
Columbus vs. Trump The city of Columbus,
Ohio, and a group of other cities and individuals are suing the president,
alleging that he is deliberately undermining the Affordable Care Act, thereby
ignoring his constitutional responsibility to enforce the law and subjecting
individual Americans to higher healthcare costs.
Donald
Trump’s appoint of a fairly young justice to the Supreme Court will color
decisions from that judicial body for an expect thirty or more years to come.
The appointments are solely from a list of social conservatives who favor
corporations over individuals and are committed to reduce the impact of
potential individual federal rights which courts would be required to enforce.
The reconfigured court clearly would reinforce the accelerating income
inequality that is ripping the country into incompatible and highly-polarized
faction and move the United States even closer to become a de facto, full-on
plutocracy.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and the United States has not witnessed such a concerted effort
against its founding principles in almost a century, and the United States has
not been so polarized since the onset of the Civil War.
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