A decision
is expected this month on whether the Affordable Care Act will be struck down
by the United States Supreme Court. Legal scholars suspect that the individual
mandate provision faces the most risk of being struck from the law, while
experts expect the remainder of the law to stand. It is not clear what the
Supreme Court will decide, but a lot of people have been confused on what the
Court will look at when deciding whether to uphold the law.
In order to
understand the Government’s legal justification for the law, one needs to
understand the Commerce Clause in our Constitution. This clause has been used
to expand what Congress can and can’t regulate through its laws. Essentially,
the Commerce Clause permits Congress to regulate commerce between states. Thus,
if the commercial activity involves “interstate commerce” then Congress can
regulate it by statute.
The seminal
case in this matter was Wickard v. Filburn.
In Wickard, Congress had passed a law
that regulated how much wheat a farmer could grow on his property. The law was
passed in order to drive up wheat prices in a down economy. Mr. Filburn was a
farmer who grew wheat for his own personal consumption. The government ordered
him to destroy his crops and pay a fine. His appeal followed. In upholding the
law, the Supreme Court expanded the commerce clause power to include anything
that has an effect on interstate commerce. This expansive language has been
relied on since that time in order to uphold a large amount of congressional
statutes. The Wickard decision has
garnered the ire of many strict constitutional scholars that felt the expansion
on the commerce clause power was not what the Framers of the Constitution
intended.
How does
this affect the Health Care debate? Well, the justification the government has
relied on in supporting the law is the commerce clause and its expansive power.
While experts do not expect the law to be struck down, many expect the
individual mandate portion to be eliminated. The individual mandate forces
citizens to purchase health insurance, and has a system of penalties in place
if they do not. The government argues that health care is interstate commerce
and falls squarely within their power. The opponents argue that forcing a
citizen to purchase health insurance infringes on their freedoms, and is an
unjustified expansion of the commerce clause power.
Leaving the
politics of the health care debate aside for a minute, the decision in this
case will be a seminal moment in the commerce clause debate, and could have far
reaching consequences on future cases brought under the clause. If you would
like to learn more about the health care decision, and other decisions in front
of the Supreme Court this session, the SCOTUSblog
has a “plain English” post
explaining in layman’s terms the issues of each case.
If you need
help navigating the confusing legal world in New Hampshire
or Massachusetts ,
please also feel free to contact
us today.
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