Could the latest high-stakes challenge to Obamacare be stumbling just short of the goal line?
For the last two years, four challengers have waged a pitched battle with the Obama administration over whether the Affordable Care Act authorizes subsidies that make insurance affordable for millions of people. The stakes are huge: Without the subsidies, more than 8 million Americans would lose their insurance.
The case, King v. Burwell, has reached the doors of the Supreme Court. Yet now, just weeks before the much-anticipated oral argument, questions suddenly have surfaced about whether the challengers can be in court at all.
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To sue in federal court, a plaintiff must show that he has so-called “standing” — that he suffered an injury, and that if he wins in court the injury will be redressed. If either piece is missing, the court has no power to hear the case.
That brings us to the protagonists in this drama: Virginia residents David King, Rose Luck, Brenda Levy, and Douglas Hurst. Obamacare opponents hand-picked these four regular-Joe plaintiffs to serve as figureheads in the King lawsuit. They argued in the lower courts that the four have standing to sue because – counterintuitively – subsidies that make insurance cheaper actually hurt them.
The theory goes like this: The Affordable Care Act’s “individual mandate” requires people to buy health insurance. However, the mandate doesn’t apply to people for whom insurance is unaffordable, and it defines “unaffordable” to mean more than 8% of household income. The plaintiffs told the lower courts that insurance on the Obamacare exchanges would cost more than 8% of their income without subsidies, so they wouldn’t have to buy it. But with subsidies, insurance costs less than 8% of their income. Thus the subsidies actually hurt them: They didn’t want insurance, but the subsidies catapulted them within the individual mandate, meaning they had to either buy insurance or violate the mandate and pay a tax penalty.
In the lower courts, the government poked holes in that argument for two of the plaintiffs. It ran the numbers and showed that for Rose Luck and David King, insurance would be “unaffordable,” and they wouldn’t have to buy it, even with the subsidies. Thus Luck and King weren’t injured; they lacked standing.
The plaintiffs didn’t fight back. Instead, they relied on the standing of the other two plaintiffs, Brenda Levy and Douglas Hurst. That was enough because only one plaintiff needs standing for the lawsuit to continue. But in recent days, published reports have cast doubt on Levy and Hurst’s standing too.
Levy said she had standing because at her projected income level for 2014 – $43,000 – she would be within the individual mandate with subsidies but not without them. But she said she earns a living as a substitute teacher, and the school where she works has told reporters she made less than $10,000 a year there. It’s possible she has other sources of income, but if so, she hasn’t yet proved it in court.
Hurst, meanwhile, served in the military and may be eligible for free VA health coverage. If so, that means he could cure his supposed “injury” – being forced to either pay for insurance or pay a tax penalty — by signing up for free care. Hurst could argue that he’s still injured, legally speaking, by having to sign up for something he doesn’t want, even if it’s free. But that argument is a close call at best. A court could find that isn’t enough of an injury to create standing.









