For much of the year, health-care advocates have been concerned about the Texas v. U.S. case, but not too concerned. Yes, a far-right judge in Texas used the case as a weapon to rule against the Affordable Care Act in its entirety late last year, but there was a general consensus — from the left, right, and center — that the ruling was absurd and would obviously fail on appeal.
It may be time to revisit those assumptions.
A federal appeals court panel grilled Democratic attorneys general on Tuesday about whether Obamacare violates the U.S. Constitution, as it weighs whether to uphold a Texas judge’s ruling striking down the landmark healthcare reform law.
The judges focused on whether the 2010 Affordable Care Act lost its justification after Republican President Donald Trump in 2017 signed a law that eliminated a tax penalty used to enforce the ACA’s mandate that all Americans buy health insurance. […]
“If you no longer have a tax, why isn’t it unconstitutional?” Judge Jennifer Elrod, who was appointed to the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals by Republican President George W. Bush, asked attorneys for the Democratic officials defending the law during a hearing in New Orleans.
It’s a tough question to wrap one’s head around. For much of this decade, the right argued, “The individual mandate is unconstitutional so judges must tear down ‘Obamacare.’” The U.S. Supreme Court disagreed and the law remained intact.
In late 2017, however, Republicans effectively scrapped the mandate penalty in their tax plan, at which point, the right argued, “The individual mandate has been zeroed out so ‘Obamacare’ must be seen as impermissible.”
There is no scenario in which this makes sense, and yet, there was a Bush-appointed appellate judge yesterday, suggesting the ACA’s future is in doubt precisely because of this nonsensical train of thought.
Indeed, by some measures, it wasn’t even the strangest thing Elrod said during oral arguments in the 5th Circuit yesterday.
At a separate point in the proceedings, Elrod made the case that when congressional Republicans zeroed out the individual mandate, they may have done so in order to destroy the entirety of the health-care-reform law.
According to the Republican judge, perhaps lawmakers thought to themselves at the time, “Aha, this is the silver bullet that’s going to undo Obamacare.”
If that sounds to you like a crazy-pants argument, rest assured, you’re not alone.









