Re: The Constitutionality of the Individual Mandate for Health Insurance
The simple case for the Affordable Care Act’s constitutionality
The simple case for the Affordable Care Act’s constitutionality : SCOTUSblog
Dawn Johnsen, of Indiana University Maurer School of Law, discusses the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act for our on-line symposium.
Explosive partisan politics and proliferating litigation and commentary surround the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. All of this has obscured the simplicity of the case for Congress’s authority to enact the law. The Commerce Clause basis for the law – the issue that has predominated in the courts – is straightforward. The question ultimately for the Supreme Court will be whether it should create a new limit on Congress’s authority to use its otherwise-broad power to regulate interstate commerce to address the national health care crisis.
Anyone paying close attention – who has slogged through the lengthy opinions, listened to or read about the oral arguments, followed the clever attacks seeking to frame the law as an unprecedented liberty intrusion – can appreciate the risk of becoming lost in the weeds. When the Supreme Court addresses the question, as it surely will, it should resist efforts to portray the law as raising complex, undecided issues, and instead emphasize the degree to which fundamentals support the law.
The simple case for the Affordable Care Act’s constitutionality
The simple case for the Affordable Care Act’s constitutionality : SCOTUSblog
Dawn Johnsen, of Indiana University Maurer School of Law, discusses the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act for our on-line symposium.
The following is an essay for our symposium on the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act by Dawn Johnsen, Walter W. Foskett Professor of Law at the Indiana University Maurer School of Law. She teaches and writes about issues of constitutional law, and previously served as the Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel, U.S. Department of Justice under President Clinton.
Explosive partisan politics and proliferating litigation and commentary surround the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. All of this has obscured the simplicity of the case for Congress’s authority to enact the law. The Commerce Clause basis for the law – the issue that has predominated in the courts – is straightforward. The question ultimately for the Supreme Court will be whether it should create a new limit on Congress’s authority to use its otherwise-broad power to regulate interstate commerce to address the national health care crisis.
Anyone paying close attention – who has slogged through the lengthy opinions, listened to or read about the oral arguments, followed the clever attacks seeking to frame the law as an unprecedented liberty intrusion – can appreciate the risk of becoming lost in the weeds. When the Supreme Court addresses the question, as it surely will, it should resist efforts to portray the law as raising complex, undecided issues, and instead emphasize the degree to which fundamentals support the law.
