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tangent4ronpaul
05-13-2010, 12:21 PM
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gBZEHpc6Pi64FEn9T4wWJefbEyZgD9FLGRI00

US files first defense of health care law in court

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR (AP) – 21 hours ago

WASHINGTON — Critics who allege that Congress overstepped the U.S. Constitution by requiring Americans to carry health insurance are "flatly wrong," the Obama administration said Wednesday in its first court defense of the landmark health care law.

Congress acted well within its power to regulate interstate commerce and to provide for the general welfare, Justice Department lawyers argued in a 46-page brief filed in federal district court in Detroit. For the courts to overturn President Barack Obama's signature domestic legislation would amount to unwarranted interference with the policymaking authority of Congress, they added.

The case could go all the way to the Supreme Court, since more than a dozen state attorneys general have also filed suit against the legislation on broadly similar grounds. Cases are pending in federal courts in Virginia and Florida, raising the possibility that different appeals courts could issue conflicting rulings that the Supreme Court would have to resolve.

The requirement that most U.S. residents carry health insurance starting in 2014 is central to the law's goal of coverage for all.

Since insurers would be forbidden from turning down sick people, the mandate assures that those who are healthy keep contributing to the pool. The law provides tax credits to help many middle-class households pay premiums, and expands Medicaid to help the poor. While exempting those facing financial hardship from the coverage requirement, it imposes a tax penalty on those who can afford a policy, but refuse to sign up.

Critics contend that Congress cannot require average citizens to purchase a particular good or service.

"Under the government's theory, they could force anyone to purchase vitamins, join a health club, or buy a General Motors vehicle, for that matter," said Robert Muise, a lead attorney for the Thomas More Law Center, the conservative group that filed the Michigan lawsuit March 23, the same day Obama signed the law.

The Justice Department said voiding the coverage requirement would gut the health care law.

"Congress determined that the health care system in the United States is in crisis, spawning public expense and private tragedy," said the government's brief. "After decades of failed attempts, Congress enacted comprehensive health care reform to deal with this overwhelming national problem. The minimum coverage provision is vital to that comprehensive scheme. Enjoining it would thwart this reform and re-ignite the crisis that the elected branches of government acted to forestall."

Government lawyers argued that a decision to opt out of health insurance is not merely a matter of personal choice. It has consequences for everybody else. Uninsured people will get sick, or have accidents, and someone must pay for their care if they can't afford it.

"Individual decisions to forgo insurance coverage, in the aggregate, substantially affect interstate commerce by shifting costs to health care providers and the public," the Justice Department said.

People who remain uninsured by choice "have not opted out of health care; they are not passive bystanders divorced from the health care market," the government continued. "They have made a choice regarding the method of payment for the services they expect to receive, no less 'active' than a decision to pay by credit card rather than by check."

As for the tax penalty for refusing to get coverage, the Obama administration argued that it falls squarely within the authority of Congress to levy taxes.

The Thomas More center is seeking an injunction to block the coverage requirement. Its response to the government is due June 1.

tangent4ronpaul
05-13-2010, 12:25 PM
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE64B4Q720100512

Obama government defends healthcare law in court

(Reuters) - The Obama administration has urged a court to reject an attempt to block a controversial new law overhauling the U.S. healthcare system, saying it was constitutional and any challenge was premature.

U.S. | Health | Healthcare Reform

The reforms, a top priority of President Barack Obama, were approved by Congress in March after a fierce national debate. The Justice Department defended their legality late on Tuesday in the first response to a number of court challenges.

A conservative public interest group, the Thomas More Law Center, had filed a lawsuit in Michigan on March 23, the day Obama signed the law, and asked the court for an injunction to block it from taking effect.

The group said a provision requiring most Americans to buy health insurance under threat of financial penalty was beyond the scope of Congress' power and was an unconstitutional tax.

The group also said it violated their constitutional rights because federal tax dollars would be used to fund abortions.

Defending the law, the Justice Department said Congress acted to address a national problem, the minimum coverage provisions were constitutional and the lawsuit was premature because no one had been harmed by the law.

"They bring this suit four years before the provision they challenge takes effect, demonstrate no current injury, and merely speculate whether the law will harm them once it is in force," the Justice Department told the court.

"Enjoining it would thwart this reform and reignite the crisis that the elected branches of government acted to forestall," the administration said in a 46-page brief made available in Washington.

Several states have also filed lawsuits in Florida and Virginia challenging the law.

A lawyer for the Thomas More Law Center said he was not concerned by the issues raised by the administration. "There were no surprises and we're prepared to respond to every argument they raise," said Robert Muise, senior trial counsel.

The Justice Department said that Congress did not exceed its authority. It said those who did not want to buy insurance may qualify for an exemption from any penalty and that U.S. law prohibits lawsuits aimed at blocking the collection of taxes.

(Reporting by Jeremy Pelofsky, editing by David Storey)

ChaosControl
05-13-2010, 12:36 PM
For the courts to overturn President Barack Obama's signature domestic legislation would amount to unwarranted interference with the policymaking authority of Congress

They say that like its a bad thing.

Stary Hickory
05-13-2010, 01:50 PM
They say that like its a bad thing.

yeah and not a word said for protecting freedom preserving our constitution. Makes me angry with rage. The SC is there to uphold the law. If the leftist don't like the current law then they must go through the amendment process.