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Ruling:
High
court
upholds
key
portions
of
Obamacare
health
law
By MARK
SHERMAN
Associated
Press
WASHINGTON
- The
Supreme
Court on
Thursday
upheld
the vast
majority
of
President
Barack
Obama's
historic
health
care
overhaul,
including
the
hotly
debated
core
requirement
that
virtually
all
Americans
have
health
insurance.
The 5-4
decision
means
the huge
overhaul,
still
taking
effect,
will
proceed
and pick
up
momentum
over the
next
several
years,
affecting
the way
that
countless
Americans
receive
and pay
for
their
personal
medical
care.
The
ruling
hands
Obama a
campaign-season
victory
in
rejecting
arguments
that
Congress
went too
far in
approving
the
plan.
However,
Republicans
quickly
indicated
they
will try
to use
the
decision
to rally
their
supporters
against
what
they
call
"Obamacare."
Stocks
of
hospital
companies
rose
sharply,
and
insurance
companies
fell
immediately
after
the
decision
was
announced
that
Americans
must
carry
health
insurance
or pay a
penalty.
Breaking
with the
court's
other
conservative
justices,
Chief
Justice
John
Roberts
announced
the
judgment
that
allows
the law
to go
forward
with its
aim of
covering
more
than 30
million
uninsured
Americans.
The
justices
rejected
two of
the
administration's
three
arguments
in
support
of the
insurance
requirement.
But the
court
said the
mandate
can be
construed
as a
tax.
"Because
the
Constitution
permits
such a
tax, it
is not
our role
to
forbid
it, or
to pass
upon its
wisdom
or
fairness,"
Roberts
said.
The
court
found
problems
with the
law's
expansion
of
Medicaid,
but even
there
said the
expansion
could
proceed
as long
as the
federal
government
does not
threaten
to
withhold
states'
entire
Medicaid
allotment
if they
don't
take
part in
the
law's
extension.
The
court's
four
liberal
justices,
Stephen
Breyer,
Ruth
Bader
Ginsburg,
Elena
Kagan
and
Sonia
Sotomayor,
joined
Roberts
in the
outcome.
Justices
Samuel
Alito,
Anthony
Kennedy,
Antonin
Scalia
and
Clarence
Thomas
dissented.
"The act
before
us here
exceeds
federal
power
both in
mandating
the
purchase
of
health
insurance
and in
denying
non-consenting
states
all
Medicaid
funding,"
the
dissenters
said in
a joint
statement.
Kennedy
summarized
the
dissent
in
court.
"In our
view,
the act
before
us is
invalid
in its
entirety,"
he said.
The
legislation
passed
Congress
in early
2010
after a
monumental
struggle
in which
all
Republicans
voted
against
it.
House
Republicans
announced
in
advance
of the
ruling
they
would
vote to
wipe out
whatever
was left
standing
by the
justices,
and GOP
presidential
candidate
Mitt
Romney
has
joined
in calls
for its
complete
repeal.
After
the
ruling,
Republican
campaign
strategists
said
Romney
will use
it to
continue
campaigning
against
"Obamacare"
and
attacking
the
president's
signature
health
care
program
as a tax
increase.
"Obama
might
have his
law, but
the GOP
has a
cause,"
said
veteran
campaign
adviser
Terry
Holt.
"This
promises
to
galvanize
Republican
support
around a
repeal
of what
could
well be
called
the
largest
tax
increase
in
American
history."
Democrats
said
Romney,
who
backed
an
individual
health
insurance
mandate
when he
was
Massachusetts
governor,
will
have a
hard
time
exploiting
the
ruling.
"Mitt
Romney
is the
intellectual
godfather
of
Obamacare,"
said
Democratic
consultant
Jim
Manley.
"The
bigger
issue is
the
rising
cost of
health
care,
and this
bill is
designed
to deal
with
it."
Justice
Ginsburg
said the
court
should
have
upheld
the
entire
law as
written
without
forcing
any
changes
in the
Medicaid
provision.
She said
Congress'
constitutional
authority
to
regulate
interstate
commerce
supports
the
individual
mandate.
She
warned
that the
legal
reasoning,
even
though
the law
was
upheld,
could
cause
trouble
in
future
cases.
"So in
the end,
the
Affordable
Health
Care Act
survives
largely
unscathed.
But the
court's
commerce
clause
and
spending
clause
jurisprudence
has been
set
awry. My
expectation
is that
the
setbacks
will be
temporary
blips,
not
permanent
obstructions,"
Ginsburg
said in
a
statement
she,
too,
read
from the
bench. |