Better late than never?
Right..........
The right is giddy after last week’s Supreme Court arguments on Obamacare. Their glee may come back to haunt them.
By Eliot Spitzer|Posted Monday, April 2, 2012, at 5:24 PM ET
Peggy Noonan of the Wall Street Journal has made clear her distaste for the Affordable Care Act
Brendan Smialowski/Getty Images for Meet the Press.
Brendan Smialowski/Getty Images for Meet the Press.
Conservative intellectuals are feeling giddy. Last week they feasted on the veritable mauling of Solicitor General Donald Verrilli by the Supreme Court’s five conservative justices. (In truth, Verrilli was only questioned by four of the conservatives—Justice Clarence Thomas, true to form, didn’t speak. But we know where his vote lies.) It is now conventional wisdom that health care reform—the Affordable Care Act, to be precise—will be deemed unconstitutional, at least in part. I tell the students in my class at the City College of New York that “five” is the most powerful number in the nation. For as we have seen, five votes on the Supreme Court can pick a president—voters notwithstanding—and five votes could redefine our understanding of Congress’ power under the Commerce Clause of the Constitution—precedents notwithstanding. So maybe the conservative celebration is merited. Yet it is also plausible that an element of hubris has overtaken the right.
Because, in this moment of conservative glee, there are a few
things—indisputable facts—that should not be forgotten, factors that
might yet transform glee into a moment of hubris as Justice Anthony
Kennedy (the likely swing vote) and Chief Justice John Roberts (a
slightly less likely swing vote) actually confront the case:
1. Judge Laurence Silberman of the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the D.C. circuit—and one of the most conservative judges in
the nation—wrote the following, in upholding the constitutionality of
the statute:
We acknowledge some discomfort with the
Government’s failure to advance any clear doctrinal principles limiting
congressional mandates that any American purchase any product or service
in interstate commerce. … That difficulty is troubling, but not fatal,
not least because we are interpreting the scope of a long-established
constitutional power, not recognizing a new constitutional right. … It
suffices for this case to recognize, as noted earlier, that the health
insurance market is a rather unique one, both because virtually everyone
will enter or affect it, and because the uninsured inflict a
disproportionate harm on the rest of the market as a result of their
later consumption of health care services.
As even Judge Silberman recognized, there is really no question that
existing Commerce Clause doctrine squarely supports the law. If the
court wants to redefine Commerce Clause doctrine, five votes can do it.
But it will be an act of judicial activism and require an entire
rewriting of our understanding of what powers Congress does and does not
have in its arsenal to deal with national economic problems. Bear in
mind, the mandate in this case is conceptually no different from the
existing mandate that every employed person pay into the fund that
supports Medicare, whether the individual does now, or ever will,
benefit from the Medicare system.
2. The very idea of the mandate emerged from the
conservative think tanks—the the Heritage Foundation in particular—which
were looking for a way to eliminate the free-rider problem in our
health care system. “Free loaders,” the bane of the conservative
worldview, were getting medical care while contributing nothing to the
system. The mandate was the perfect mechanism to insure that since every
person consumes health care services at some point, every person should
pay his or her fair share of that inevitable need for medical services.
3. Insurance companies have long backed the notion
of a mandate, partly because it generates an additional revenue stream
for them but also because insurance only works if all those covered also
participate in the payment structure. Since by the law of nature, every
person will get medical care at some point, every person must in some
way participate in the payment structure, or else the entire system will
fail or be grossly unfair.
4. Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney—all their protests
notwithstanding—were fervent supporters of the mandate until they began
running for president and confronted the buzz saw of Tea Party politics.
In this context, gloating, like that of Peggy Noonan (whose columns I
usually enjoy and find modulated and thoughtful), strikes me as
dissonant. Here is what she recently wrote in the Wall Street Journal:
“Now this week the Supreme Court arguments on Obama Care, which have
made that law look so hollow, so careless, that it amounts to a
characterological indictment of the administration. The constitutional
law professor from the University of Chicago didn't notice the
centerpiece of his agenda was not constitutional? How did that happen?”
The Heritage Foundation’s idea, initially made into law by Mitt
Romney, supported by Newt Gingrich, and found constitutional by Judge
Silberman is an “indictment” of the president?
Noonan’s tone and edge suggest that the vehemence of the attacks on
the Affordable Care Act continue to reflect two deeper ideological
problems: first, a reflexive rejection of anything the president has
done, successful or not; and second, the continued pretense of adherence
to a libertarian philosophical view that government simply should not
intervene in markets. Environmental regulations to set fuel-mileage
standards? No good. A tax to promote reduced energy consumption? No way.
The Fed’s use of its monetary power to resuscitate the economy? Forget
about it! Loans to an auto industry when the private sector will not
provide working capital to save the industry? No.
Where and when do Republicans believe that government intervention is
appropriate? That continues to be the fundamental question we need to
debate. Sure there are some fair points of disagreement in the middle,
but the absolutism of a Republican dogma that rejects anything at all is
startlingly contrary to the history of the nation. Even if the
Affordable Care Act seemed more intrusive to some, the larger point it
raises about the necessity of government intervention—both to regulate
and to save at moments of economic crisis—is central to the debate we
should be having.
I would love to hear Mitt Romney explain when and how he wants
government to guide our economy forward rather than simply repeat the
simple platitude that we should cut tax rates and eliminate regulations.
That recent approach hasn’t turned out so well.
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