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Obama Health Care Law Likely Headed For A Supreme Court Ruling As 2012 Election Season Picks Up

Barack Obama Health Care Law

First Posted: 09/29/11 11:03 AM ET Updated: 11/29/11 05:12 AM ET

By MARK SHERMAN, ASSOCIATED PRESS

(AP) WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama's landmark health care overhaul appears headed for a Supreme Court ruling as the presidential election season hits full stride in the coming year.

The health care law affecting virtually every American is sure to figure prominently in President Barack Obama's campaign for re-election. Republican contenders are already assailing it in virtually every debate and speech.

The administration on Wednesday formally appealed a ruling by the federal appeals court in Atlanta that struck down the law's core requirement that Americans buy health insurance or pay a penalty beginning in 2014. The administration said the appeals court decision declaring the law's central provision unconstitutional was "fundamentally flawed."

At the same time, however, the winners in that appellate case, 26 states and the National Federation of Independent Business, also asked for high court review Wednesday, saying the entire law, and not just the individual insurance mandate, should be struck down.

The Supreme Court almost always weighs in when a lower court has struck down all or part of a federal law, to say nothing of one that aims to extend insurance coverage to more than 30 million Americans.

The bigger question had been the timing.

The administration's filing makes it more likely that the case will be heard and decided in the term that begins next week.

Repeating arguments it has made in courts across the country in response to many challenges to the law, the administration said Congress was well within its constitutional power to enact the insurance requirement.

Disagreeing with that, the 26 states and the business group said in their filings that the justices should act before the 2012 presidential election because of uncertainty over costs and requirements.

On the issue of timing, their cause got an unexpected boost from retired Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens, who said voters would be better off if they knew the law's fate before casting their ballots next year.

The 91-year-old Stevens said in an Associated Press interview that the justices would not shy away from deciding the case in the middle of a presidential campaign and would be doing the country a service.

"It would be better to have that known about than be speculated as a part of the political argument," Stevens said in his Supreme Court office overlooking the Capitol.

Though the Atlanta appeals court struck down the individual insurance requirement, it upheld the rest of the law. The states and the business group say that would still impose huge new costs.

In another challenge to the same law, the federal appeals court in Cincinnati sided with the administration.

In a separate Supreme Court filing Tuesday night, the Obama administration said it does not appear necessary to grant review of the Cincinnati case, adding that consolidating the two cases could complicate the presentation of arguments "without a sufficient corresponding benefit."

The law would extend health coverage mainly through subsidies to purchase private insurance and an expansion of Medicaid. The states object to the Medicaid expansion and a provision forcing them to cover their employees' health care at a level set by the government.

The individual insurance mandate "indisputably served as the centerpiece of the delicate compromise that produced" the law, according to the states, with Florida taking the lead.

The administration said in the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that the law's changes in the insurance market, including requiring insurers to cover people without regard for pre-existing health conditions, would not work without the participation mandate.

The insurance requirement is intended to force healthier people who might otherwise forgo insurance into the pool of insured, helping to reduce private insurers' financial risk.

Both appeals stressed the importance of resolving the overhaul's constitutionality as soon as possible, which under normal court procedures would be by June 2012.

Stevens said that if he still had a vote on the court on timing, he would cast it in favor of hearing the case sooner rather than later. He would not say how he would vote on the issue of the law's constitutionality, although he said the court's 6-3 decision in a 2005 case involving medical marijuana seems to lend support to the administration's defense of the law.

In addition to the competing rulings on the law's validity, a federal appeals court in Richmond, Va., ruled that it was premature to decide the law's constitutionality. Citing a federal law aimed at preventing lawsuits from tying up tax collection, that court held that a definitive ruling could come only after taxpayers begin paying the penalty for not purchasing insurance. The administration suggested that the Supreme Court should consider that issue because of the appellate ruling.

The states, along with Florida, are: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

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By MARK SHERMAN, ASSOCIATED PRESS (AP) WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama's landmark health care overhaul appears headed for a Supreme Court ruling as the presidential election season hits full s...
By MARK SHERMAN, ASSOCIATED PRESS (AP) WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama's landmark health care overhaul appears headed for a Supreme Court ruling as the presidential election season hits full s...
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01:20 AM on 10/15/2011
I hope this corporate welfare program is found unconstitutional. to be FORCED into debt to a for profit company is an outrage on freedom. It is the height of corrupt capitolism. A non profit mandate however that covered everyone at cost.. with 5% overhead would be a viable solution tho.. but screw anyone that thinks im gonna pay a for profit company that has a ceo making 58,000 dollars an hour.
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latoussaint
Truths and roses have thorns about them.-HDT
06:59 AM on 09/30/2011
Figures, that with the exception of Maine and Wisconsin and a small pocket in Iowa, most of these 26 states are collectively filled with uneducated people. Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington,and Wyoming as beautiful as they are, have the least educated people in the country.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charles Queen
I am a disabled nam vet
02:35 AM on 09/30/2011
This bill is a joke and thats all it is.There's no way no how that their going to be able to make it a law for people to but health insurance.For one thing nobody is working so nobody can afford it.It's also a direct conflict of interest between the insurance company's and the government.Aside from that those running this time have pretty much all said that if elected the health care bill will be scarpped and thrown out which would be a very wise thing.Small buisnesses are closing their doors everyday because they cannot afford to pay the tax's it's craeting making them move overseas and putting more and more out of work here
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PhoenixLady
04:24 PM on 10/10/2011
Such a large opinion for someone whose knowledge is obviously small on this particular subject.
leonel
MA, Pol.Sci.; MA, Ed.; JD. Veteran.
09:17 PM on 09/29/2011
Democrats can regain the initiative if they declare a War on Unemployment. A serious effort with concrete steps that involves everybody and anybody, employed and unemployed. It would take a PR organizing to figure out many of the details. Just like a political campaign. Everybody can contribute suggestions, but the Democratic Party has to be leading and organizing.

Do community meetings everywhere. Get people to see it as a true war of survival, like we are getting bombed by poverty and depression and many lost lives. Take it seriously, like it has not been done before.

In order to reach a lot higher employment, there has to not only be general optimism in the public, and commitment, but there has to be general awareness that people need to have money to spend and it has to come from employment, and not from the government providing benefits and entitlements.

The health care debate can be pushed along but it is a minor issue compared to the tragic unemployment situation. The health care debate will not determine the next election---it will be determined by which party is seen as having the best solutions because the recession will not go away until the government is functioning well enough to help businesses recover and cut the unemployment at least in half.

From over 9% to down to 4-5% is what is needed for recovery.
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armchairpickleback
"Truth is treason in the empire of lies" -Ron Paul
03:02 PM on 09/29/2011
When the mandate is struck down obama will give his Johnson speech. There is no way he will be able to run for re-election, especially when he is a supposed constitutional scholar.
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TheGreatRenewal
Naming the next paradigm
12:46 PM on 09/29/2011
Health Care Reform was necessary. Why didn't we have a choice of Medicare for all or VA health for all? I lived for 20 years in a country with direct health care. I never had insurance, paid slightly higher taxes and the government did not permit the health industry to run in the for-profit model so we received health goods/services 3-10x less then the same in the US.

We should not have to have insurance at all. If we gave up insurance and paid the government directly we could have a better system. BTW I could still choose what doctor I used. Yes, if I had a non-urgent need to see a specialist I did have to wait but if I had an emergency all costs were covered and care was right away. I loved the system and felt safe.

Then I returned to the US! Read T.R.Reid's Healing of America ... it's not political. Reid explains the 4 different health systems worldwide, their pros/cons and variations. The US has all four of those systems so we should choose one and move in that direction and remove health from a for-profit model.
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xiaogermaine8
10:49 AM on 09/29/2011
How many people this president put funds into a bill the taxpayers will have to pay even if he is not re-elected? In other words, whne the country is in the same position Greece and Green Spain is today as a result of the Same insane Liberals and communists, whne no one has money or jobs, after president OBAMA is retired on a Government Entitelments Retirement and Medical, the Americans, all of them will still have to pay for the bill. The Supreme Court now will be faced with its own decision to remain a democracy or an socialist country like the UK. Than the solution is no one pay taxes because only HUFFPOST and the Government Employees will be getting the money.
10:42 AM on 09/29/2011
I'm glad we are finally going to see this fraud for what it really is...government control. The government wants to control our lives, and healthcare is the way to do it. They can't just seize control of everything. They have to control us under the "guise" of being compassionate for poor people. Trust me...this healthcare law needs to be thrown out as soon as possible if we want the economy to recover. If we don't throw it out, it will take us down for good. Be sure to check out http://conservativenewssources.wordpress.com
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stingjim
Conservative
04:43 PM on 09/29/2011
Have you just realized this is Obama's Presidency?

When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work, because somebody else is going to get what they work for, that is the beginning of the end of any nation."

Excuse me -- let me remind you of these ancient words from John F. Kennedy:

"If a free society cannot help its poor, it cannot save the few who are very rich"

(from JFK's presidenti­al inaugural address on January 20, 1961)

"Those that make peaceful revolution impossible will make VIOLENT REVOLUTION inevitable­" from a White House press conference in 1962)

1. You cannot legislate the poor into prosperity, by legislating the wealth out of prosperity.
2. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving.
3. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else.
4. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it.
5. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work, because somebody else is going to get what they work for, that is the beginning of the end of any nation.