A federal judge in Washington, D.C., will give opponents of the Affordable Care Act another chance to unravel President Obama’s healthcare law, using an obscure provision its supporters say is little more than a drafting error.
The suit alleges that the Affordable Care Act bars the federal-run health insurance marketplaces, known as exchanges, from offering subsidies to people living in states where local authorities have opted not to set up an exchange. The Obama administration had asked the former President Bill Clinton-appointed U.S. District Court Judge Paul Friedman to dismiss the suit, but he refused the request Tuesday morning. The lawsuit is one of several pending challenges to the Affordable Care Act that opponents hope will ultimately pick the law apart–piece by piece.
The subsidies are meant to help people purchase insurance under the law’s requirement to do so–without them, insurance could be prohibitively expensive for some. But the health care law states that only people in “an exchange established by the State” are eligible for the subsidies. Caroline Fredrickson, president of the liberal American Constitution Society, says that’s a drafting mistake by Congress–not a deliberate attempt to hurt people who have to purchase from a federal-run exchange because their state refused to set one up.
“Congress may not have done the most beautiful job of crafting a statute when they passed this legislation, but clearly what they intended to do was ensure the federal government could step in when the states failed or refused to act,” says Fredrickson. “It’s nonsensical to assume that they drafted something to ensure that the law wouldn’t function.”
The plaintiffs and the conservative legal groups supporting the challenge argue that Democrats in Congress wrote, and the president signed, a healthcare law whose language contained the seeds of its own annihilation. They sought to punish states for not setting up their own exchanges by inflicting hardship on some of their most vulnerable residents, say critics.
“I think it’s preposterous,” said Elizabeth Wydra, chief counsel for the liberal Constitutional Accountability Center. “I can’t imagine that the supporters of the Affordable Care Act would want to punish the Americans who arguably need the support of the exchanges the most by saying they don’t get acess to the tax credits that give them access to affordable health insurance.”









