Many pundits predict the Supreme Court will decide the Obamacare
case 5:4 along partisan lines. Justices Scalia, Alito, and Thomas and Chief Justice
Roberts, they assume, will vote to strike the legislation
down, and justices Breyer, Ginsburg,
Sotomayor and Kagan will vote to uphold it. If these predictions are correct, the outcome will depend on Justice
Kennedy, often considered the “swing”
vote between Court conservatives and liberals.
The guessing is that Justice Kennedy will tip the case to
the conservative side.
This is all most unfortunate. An extremely important decision about public
policy is at stake, and policy decisions
are supposed to be made by elected politicians, not by judicial ideologues.
Still, policy
decisions by elected officials must not exceed the limits posed by the
Constitution. And there are weighty
reasons why mandated purchase of insurance could be considered
unconstitutional.
Back in 1954 when the Supreme Court found segregated public schools to be
unconstitutional, Chief Justice Earl
Warren managed to get a unanimous decision of this highly contentious case. It is generally thought that this unanimity
helped gain eventual public acceptance of the decision in Brown v. Board of
Education. .
A unanimous decision by the nine justices, avoiding the appearance of partisanship,
would be equally desirable in the current case. A unanimous decision to uphold
Obamacare is unlikely. But a unanimous
decision to declare it unconstitutional is not impossible and could be the best
possible outcome both from the legal and the policy point of view. .
The Administration argues that mandated purchase of
insurance is essential if everyone is to be insured. But a unanimous Court could rely on reasoning
supplied by an amicus curia brief submitted to the Court on behalf of 50 medical
doctors (and other people) who support a single-payer insurance system. The doctors’ basic argument is that the
mandate to buy insurance cannot be justified as the only way to skin the cat,
since an alternative exists. They point
out that a single payer system supported
by taxes is clearly constitutional,
exists in a number of countries,
and already exists in the U.S.
for people over 65.
Such reasoning could unite all members of the Court,
would rest on strong constitutional
logic and precedent, and would help to focus future policy discussions by
elected leaders. And from comments made
during oral argument, at least one justice (interestingly, Kennedy) was familiar with the doctors’
argument. As the Court’s principal swing
voter, Kennedy would be in a strong position to lead the
Court to a unanimous decision along these lines if he is so inclined.
Such a decision would give everyone something to be happy
about. Conservatives would be happy that
the Court avoided setting the dangerous precedent that people can be compelled
to buy goods or services. Liberals could
take satisfaction that the Court had drawn favorable attention to a single-payer system paid for by taxes, their
preferred solution all along, and
perhaps helped make such a system politically possible in the near future.
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This piece has run in the Daily Telegram, Adrian, Michigan, and on CommonDreams.org .
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