COMMENTARY
by Paul Waldman |
The Supreme Court will likely hand down its decision on the Affordable Care Act on Thursday, but we already have something like a consensus on what that decision will be: bad. Although there are about a half-dozen different ways the court could rule, very few knowledgeable observers think the law stands much chance of surviving in full. The most likely outcome is probably that the individual mandate gets struck down, while most of the rest of the law stands. Though far better than having the entire law eliminated, this would still be a defeat for Democrats. And so, true to form, progressives are already assembling their circular firing squad.
It’s only natural. Any time you suffer a setback that large in politics, you want to go back and figure out who’s to blame, and whether things could have turned out differently. For many, that leads to this conclusion: If only everyone had listened to me, we would have won. If only Obama had made a more forceful constitutional argument to move public opinion. If only his administration hadn’t waited so long to take the legal argument against the mandate seriously. If only they had talked more about the Founders in their briefs to the Supreme Court. If only they had just called the mandate a tax.
These arguments are completely reasonable—and completely wrong. The reality is, there is nothing that President Obama, his administration, or congressional Democrats could have done to alter the outcome of this drama. There was no legal strategy, no legislative rejiggering, no deft public argument that would have changed a thing.
To refresh your memory, this is what happened over the last few years: In a vain attempt to limit Republican opposition to their reform, Democrats put aside their dream of a single-payer system, and instead constructed a plan that maintained the private insurance system, achieving near-universal coverage through a mechanism devised by conservatives and advocated by them for years. Conservatives then decided that their own idea was in fact the essence of socialist tyranny, and on the very day the law was passed, filed lawsuits challenging it, using a legal theory that experts across the political spectrum initially derided as absurd. But in short order, conservatives everywhere came to agree that a greater affront to the Constitution had never been seen, and Republican-appointed judges were more than happy to declare the law invalid, all the way up to (in all likelihood) the Supreme Court.








