Republican presidential contenders quickly condemned the Supreme Court’s landmark decision Thursday to uphold Affordable Care Act subsidies and pledged to carry on their fight to repeal the health care law into the next election. But some Republican strategists are breathing at least a partial sigh of relief, arguing that a ruling in the opposite direction might have triggered a political catastrophe for the entire GOP field.
RELATED: Supreme Court upholds Obamacare subsidies
For Democrats, the response was simple enough: elation that the law survived its toughest challenge since an unsuccessful 2012 suit challenging its individual mandate.
“I applaud the Supreme Court’s decision to affirm what the authors of the Affordable Care Act clearly intended and wrote into law: that health insurance should be affordable and available in every state across the country,” Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton said in a statement. “Republicans in Congress have waged a sustained attack against this promise.”
2016 Republican candidates, by contrast, were quick to register their disagreement with the opinion authored by Chief Justice John Roberts.
“I am disappointed by today’s Supreme Court ruling in the King v. Burwell case,” former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush said in a statement. “But this decision is not the end of the fight against Obamacare.”
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who had signed onto an amicus brief with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) in support of the King suit, also accused the court of blowing the case.
“I disagree with the Court’s ruling and believe they have once again erred in trying to correct the mistakes made by President Obama and Congress in forcing Obamacare on the American people,” Rubio said. He said he was “committed to repealing this bad law and replacing it with my consumer-centered plan that puts patients and families back in control of their health care decisions.”
In his own statement, Cruz grumbled that “robed Houdinis transmogrified a ‘federal exchange’ into an exchange ‘established by the State’” and accused the court’s majority of acting for “nakedly political reasons.”
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), whose state already has its own exchange and would not have been affected if the court ruled the other way, said in a statement that the ruling “turns both the rule of law and common sense on its head.” In perhaps the fiercest response, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee — a longtime critic of federal judges — labeled the 6-3 decision “an out-of-control act of judicial tyranny.”
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who announced on Wednesday that he would not restore subsidies in his state had the court ruled against them, urged Republicans to focus on political opposition to the health care law instead.
“Today’s Supreme Court ruling upholding the administration’s implementation of Obamacare means Republicans in the House and Senate must redouble their efforts to repeal and replace this destructive and costly law,” he said. Walker has not detailed his own alternative (and, in fact, claimed credit Wednesday for using the law’s subsidies to insure poor residents) but restated his call that “Congress needs to repeal and replace Obamacare.”
This pivot away from legal challenges and back to the uphill grind of legislative opposition was a consistent theme from the GOP field and top party officials.
“While I disagree with the ruling, it was never up to the Supreme Court to save us from Obamacare,” former Texas Gov. Rick Perry said in a statement.
“Today’s ruling makes it clear that if we want to fix our broken health care system, then we will need to elect a Republican president with proven ideas and real solutions that will help American families,” Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus said in a statement.
Despite the professed disappointment, a number of Republicans had grown concerned in the run-up to the decision about the possible political consequences of a massive disruption of health care hanging over the election.








