Nominee hints at doubts on ACA challenge
Senate Dems press Kavanaugh on health law
WASHINGTON — If Republicans are hoping Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh will help them knock down Obamacare in the courts, they might be in for a disappointment.
Kavanaugh has signaled in private meetings with Senate Democrats that he is skeptical of some of the legal claims being asserted in the latest GOP-led effort to overturn the Affordable Care Act, also known as ACA.
The lawsuit, which begins oral arguments next week in Texas, claims that because Congress last year effectively invalidated a key provision of Obamacare — the requirement that all Americans have health insurance — the entire 2010 law should be struck down.
After repeatedly failing to repeal Obamacare in Congress last year, Republicans are again turning to the courts to strike down the law, despite the Supreme Court upholding it twice.
As Kavanaugh made the rounds on Capitol Hill in recent weeks, he suggested that even if one piece of the health care law is ruled invalid, the entire law doesn’t necessarily have to come down with it, three Democrats who were in the meetings said.
In response to questions about the lawsuit, he declined to comment on it directly but repeatedly pointed to the legal idea that one unconstitutional provision shouldn’t eliminate an entire statute.
Kavanaugh’s views on the issue could be important if the Texas case, which the Trump administration has partially endorsed, eventually makes its way to the Supreme Court, as some expect it will.
Democrats said they were viewing Kavanaugh’s comments warily, unsure if they indicated his beliefs or were an attempt to use legal semantics to alleviate fears Some Senate Democrats are seeking Brett Kavanaugh’s views on pre-existing conditions. that he would support the renewed legal attack on the Affordable Care Act.
Democratic senators are expected to press Kavanaugh on the issue during his confirmation hearing next week, particularly emphasizing the need to preserve Obamacare’s protections that ban insurers from refusing to cover people with pre-existing medical conditions.
“I think this becomes the narrative of his nomination, which could bring it down,” said Sen. Sherrod Brown, D- Ohio, who met Kavanaugh earlier this month. “If people realize that their insurance is at risk because of this court nominee, I think there is going to be a lot of pressure put on a lot of people to vote no.”
Brown said it was unclear if Kavanaugh was using “legalese” to try to address Democratic concerns about the future of the law.
Kavanaugh did not directly indicate how he would rule on this or any other Obamacare case in the closed-door meetings, Brown and the other Democrats said. But when asked about the lawsuit, Kavanaugh repeatedly pointed to the legal concept of severability, or how much of a law needs to be invalidated when one piece is struck down by the courts.
“Asked about the Texas lawsuit, what Kavanaugh brought up was severabili- ty,” said another person who attended one of the meetings with a Democratic senator.
His comments are likely to frustrate some conservatives who had criticized Kavanaugh’s views on an earlier Obamacare case.
In 2011, he wrote in a dissenting opinion that the courts couldn’t decide on the legal challenge to the individual mandate until the mandate and its penalty went into effect in 2014. He cited an obscure tax law that says Americans cannot challenge a tax until it goes into effect. At the time, the decision, which echoed a similar ruling in a different circuit court, was viewed as a way of dodging issuing a high-profile decision on the health care law.
In 2016, Kavanaugh suggested in the Harvard Law Review that the courts develop a default rule that if a piece of a law is ruled invalid, judges should cut “the statute to the narrowest extent possible unless Congress has indicated otherwise in the text of the statute.”
In the same piece, he said deciding how much of the health care law could have been cut in the 2012 Supreme Court decision on the individual mandate is an “extraordinarily difficult question.”
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., said severability did not come up in his meeting with Kavanaugh, but he left the meeting convinced that President Donald Trump’s nominee would not protect the health law. “I asked him if he could give me any assurance that he would not throw out statutory protections for insurance coverage for people with pre-existing conditions, and he would not,” Whitehouse said.
In the end, Kavanaugh’s position may not determine the law’s fate.
The justice he was nominated to replace, Anthony Kennedy, voted in 2012 to strike the individual mandate. It was Chief Justice John Roberts who angered Republicans by twice voting with liberal appointees to allow the law to stand.