GOP tries again to get high court to ax health care law
In arguments scheduled for Tuesday, the
It would wipe away protections for people with preexisting medical conditions, subsidized insurance premiums that make coverage affordable for millions of Americans and an expansion of the Medicaid program that is available to low-income people in most states.
The case comes to a court that now has three justices appointed by President
The three Trump appointees have never ruled on the substance of the health care law. Barrett, though, has been critical of the court’s earlier major health care decisions sustaining the law, both written by
The
The case turns on a change made by the Republican-controlled
If the mandate goes, they say, the rest of the law should go with it because the mandate was central to the law's passage.
But enrollment in the law’s insurance markets stayed relatively stable at more than 11 million people, even after the effective date of the penalty’s elimination in 2019. According to the nonpartisan
Another 12 million people have coverage through the law's Medicaid expansion.
The legal argument could well turn on the legal doctrine of severability, the idea that the court can excise a problematic provision from a law and allow the rest of it remain in force. The justices have done just that in other rulings in recent years.
But in the first big ACA case in 2012, Justices
A limited ruling would have little real-world consequences. The case could also be rendered irrelevant if the new
A decision is expected by late spring.
Naper Settlement waiting for insurance payment before repairing Pre-Emption House damage from water line rupture
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