Florida Suit
Poses a Challenge to Health Care Law
Published: May 10, 2010 - New York Times
As they constructed the requirement that Americans have health
insurance, Democrats in Congress took pains to make their bill as
constitutionally impregnable as possible.
But despite the health care lawfs elaborate scaffolding, attorneys general
and governors from 20 states, all but one of them Republicans, have now joined
as confident litigants in a bid to topple its central pillar. In the process,
they hope to present the Supreme
Court with a landmark opportunity to define the limits of federal authority,
perhaps for generations.
In the seven weeks since the legislation passed, at least a dozen lawsuits
have been filed in federal courts to challenge it, according to the Justice
Department. But the case that could carry the most weight, and may be on the
fastest track in the most advantageous venue, is the one
filed in Pensacola, Fla., by state officials, just minutes after President
Obama signed the bill.
Some legal scholars, including some who normally lean to the left, believe
the states have identified the lawfs weak spot and devised a credible theory for
eviscerating it.
The power of their argument lies in questioning whether Congress can regulate
inactivity — in this case by levying a tax penalty on those who do not obtain
health insurance. If so, they ask, what would theoretically prevent the
government from mandating all manner of acts in the national interest, say
regular exercise or buying an American car?
Other experts, however, dismiss the Florida
lawsuit as a politically motivated lark at taxpayer expense, and argue that
the insurance mandate falls comfortably within Supreme Court precedents. The
states, they say, may not even withstand a challenge to their standing to bring
the suit, since they are only indirectly affected by the mandate.
The focus of the litigation is the 16-word clause in Article 1, Section 8
of the Constitution that allows Congress to regulate interstate commerce, a
provision the court has interpreted broadly but not without boundaries. The lead
plaintiff, Attorney General Bill
McCollum of Florida, who is running for the Republican nomination for
governor, argues that the new lawfs historic reach presents the courts with
fresh circumstances.
gIn the last 50 years or so,h Mr. McCollum said, gother than Brown v. Board,
I think the constitutional precedents here will have a greater impact on more
people than maybe anything else the court has decided.h
Jonathan Turley, who teaches at George
Washington University Law School, said that if forced to bet, he would
predict that the courts would uphold the health care law. But Mr. Turley said
that the federal governmentfs case was far from open-and-shut, and that he
found
the arguments against the mandate compelling.
gThere are few cases in the history of the court system that have a more
significant assertion of authority by the government,h said Mr. Turley, a civil
libertarian who acknowledged being strange bedfellows with the conservative
theorists behind the lawsuit. gThis case, more than any other, may give the
court sticker shock in terms of its impact on federalism.h
Mr. McCollum, 65, said he first became fixated on the constitutionality of
the mandate last September, after reading a column
in The Wall Street Journal by two Washington lawyers, David
B. Rivkin Jr. and Lee A. Casey, of the white-shoe
firm Baker Hostetler. Mr. McCollum had worked for the firm after retiring from
the House of Representatives in 2001, but said he had never collaborated with
the men and knew them only well enough to say hello in the hallway.
Mr. Rivkin, 53, and Mr. Casey, 52, who have worked together since meeting in
the Reagan Justice Department, had been warning in columns since the early 1990s
that a health insurance mandate would extend Congressfs power to regulating
Americans gmerely because you exist.h
The lawsuit grew out of regular conference calls among a group of attorneys
general who were threatening to challenge the so-called Cornhusker Kickback, a
provision favoring a single state, Nebraska, that ultimately was dropped from
the bill.
The complaint initially was filed by attorneys general from 13 states, with
Mr. McCollumfs name listed first, like John Hancockfs. Seven other states have
since committed to join, some after bitter
disagreements between governors and attorneys general from opposing parties.
Virginia, which pre-emptively enacted a law
intended to nullify a federal insurance mandate, has filed a separate lawsuit.
The states have hired Mr. Rivkin and Mr. Casey as outside counsel under a
contract that restricts their fees to $50,000 this year. The lawyers agreed to
reduce their hourly rate to $250, from $950, a practice Mr. Rivkin said was
standard for public-sector clients.
Four of the attorneys general named as plaintiffs are running for governor.
Attorney General Henry McMaster of South Carolina, who faces a competitive
Republican primary for governor in June, is broadcasting a television
advertisement about the litigation in which he vows to gprotect the
sovereignty of South Carolina.h Mr. McCollumfs campaign Web site features a petition in support of his
lawsuit to gstop Obamacare.h
The Justice Department said it would gvigorously defendh the cases. gWe are
confident that this statute is constitutional and that we will prevail,h said
Tracy Schmaler, a department spokeswoman.
Congressional bill writers took steps to immunize the law against
constitutional challenge. They asserted in the text that the insurance mandate
gsubstantially affects interstate commerce,h the Supreme Courtfs standard for
regulation under the Commerce Clause. They labeled the penalty on those who do
not obtain coverage an gexcise tax,h because such taxes enjoy substantial
constitutional protection. Supportive analyses by prominent law professors were
read into the Congressional Record.
Nonetheless, there is a broad assumption that the health care law will earn
Supreme Court review, although it could take two years or more to get there. The
judge in Pensacola, Roger Vinson, has scheduled
oral arguments for Sept. 14 on the Justice Departmentfs anticipated motion to
dismiss the case. With no real facts to try, those legal arguments would
effectively serve as a trial.
The lawsuit could have been filed anywhere. But several lawyers involved said
they wanted the first review to rest with the United States Court of Appeals for
the 11th Circuit, a generally conservative bench that handles cases from
Florida.
The statefs Northern District includes a courthouse in Tallahassee, six
blocks from Mr. McCollumfs office. But Mr. McCollum instead filed the case 200
miles away in Pensacola, bypassing a Tallahassee judge who was named by
President Bill
Clinton and ensuring that the judge would be a Republican appointee.
gWe thought with the judges, wefd do as well there as anywhere else,h Mr.
McMaster said. gBut itfs the strength of the case wefre counting on.h
The suit lodges three related claims against the health law.
It challenges the federal governmentfs vast expansion of Medicaid
as gan unprecedented encroachment on the sovereignty of states.h The Justice
Department plans to counter that states do not have to participate in Medicaid,
according to sources familiar with its thinking. But the states argue that their
health care systems have grown so dependent on Medicaid that withdrawing would
be catastrophic.
A second count attacks the tax penalty on the uninsured, saying it is an
illegal direct tax, and not an allowable excise tax on goods or services.
But the central challenge concerns the Supreme Courtfs interpretation of the
Commerce Clause, as expressed in four decisions handed down over 63 years. If
the court interprets the clause broadly, as it did in two seminal cases on the
subject, the health insurance mandate is likely to survive.
In those two cases, Wickard
v. Filburn in 1942 and Gonzales
v. Raich in 2005, the court ruled that Congressfs regulatory authority was
so extensive that it could even prevent growers from cultivating crops for
personal use because of the cumulative impact on the market.
But twice in the last 15 years, the court has invalidated laws that used the
Commerce Clause to justify the regulation of noneconomic activity, like
restrictions on carrying guns near schools. The constitutionality of the
individual mandate, therefore, may rest on whether the justices can be convinced
that decisions not to obtain insurance substantially affect interstate commerce.
Lawyers for the government will contend that, because of the cost-shifting
nature of health insurance, people who do not obtain coverage inevitably affect
the pricing and availability of policies for everyone else. That, they will
argue, is enough to satisfy the Supreme Courtfs test.
But to Mr. Rivkin, the acceptance of that argument would herald an era
without limits.
gEvery decision you can make as a human being has an economic footprint —
whether to procreate, whether to marry,h he said. gTo say that is enough for
your behavior to be regulated transforms the Commerce Clause into an infinitely
capacious font of power, whose exercise is only restricted by the Bill of
Rights.h