In late March, the Justice Department alerted a federal appeals court to a striking request from the Trump administration: it expects the judiciary to destroy the Affordable Care Act in its entirety. There were subsequent reports that some, including Attorney General Bill Barr, counseled against the move, but the White House was insistent on the matter.
The underlying argument is convoluted and based on the absurd idea that when Congress zeroed out the ACA’s individual mandate, it lit the match that should burn down “Obamacare” altogether. On April 1, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), who voted for the bill that gutted the individual mandate, wrote to the attorney general to say he was making a mistake. Politico reported at the time:
Sen. Susan Collins wants Attorney General Bill Barr to reverse the Justice Department’s aggressive move, seeking to obliterate the Affordable Care Act.
In a letter to Barr on Monday, the Maine Republican argues that if the Trump administration wants to change the health care law, it should come to Congress and ask. Otherwise, Barr’s department should be defending the law from a lawsuit seeking to cripple it, she says.
“Rather than seeking to have the courts invalidate the ACA, the proper route for the administration to pursue would be to propose changes to the ACA or to once again seek its repeal. The administration should not attempt to use the courts to bypass Congress,” Collins wrote to Barr, whom she supported in his confirmation vote in February.
If the attorney general agreed with the Maine Republican’s concerns, he didn’t show it. In fact, Barr’s department appears to have ignored Collins’ advice altogether: it filed a brief with the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals this week, making the case for the judiciary taking coverage from millions of families.
It was against this backdrop that Collins told a Bloomberg News reporter yesterday that she’s prepared to … write another letter to Barr.









