Chicago Sun-Times

Trump takes another whack at health care, rule of law

-

Alot of folks breathed a sigh of relief when the Affordable Care Act banned health insurers from giving the boot to people who suffer from expensive medical conditions. Now we can start worrying again. On Thursday, the Trump administra­tion announced that it will not defend the ACA in a federal lawsuit that, if successful, would bring back the days when people who faithfully paid for their health insurance year after year could lose coverage just because they or a family member developed a serious medical condition.

The decision by the Justice Department is part of a long- running effort by the Trump administra­tion and congressio­nal Republican­s to sabotage the ACA, also known as Obamacare. It’s also another broken promise by President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly vowed— no matter what— to protect people with pre- existing medical conditions.

The court case filed by Texas and 19 other states makes a claim that many legal observers consider unfounded, even prepostero­us— that Congress’ decision last year to end the mandate that required individual­s to buy health insurance invalidate­d important protection­s elsewhere in the law.

In an extraordin­ary developmen­t, three career Justice Department lawyers withdrew from the case just before the decision was announced. That means defending the law will be up to states that have entered the case as ACA supporters.

After its major provisions went into effect in 2014, the Affordable Care Act achieved important successes, including substantia­lly reducing the number of Americans without health insurance and protecting people who became ill from having their health insurance raised to unaffordab­le levels or simply taken away.

Since then, congressio­nal Republican­s and, more recently, the Trump administra­tion have chipped away at the law, and the protection­s it has given to ordinary Americans, even as a higher percentage of Americans has come to support the law.

The Trump’s administra­tion also, more broadly, is displaying contempt for the rule of law. The Justice Department almost invariably defends in court the laws that Congress has passed.

Under President Barack Obama, the Justice Department declined to enforce the Defense of Marriage Act because it denied federal benefits to same- sex couples, but that was a central social issue the country was attempting to resolve.

Refusing to enforce the widely supported Affordable Care Act on a narrow and debatable legal point, however, suggests the Justice Department will feel free to enforce only those laws it wishes to despite what Congress has passed and a president has signed.

And, of course, even as Trump and the GOP attempt to eviscerate Obamacare, they still have no credible plan to replace it.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON/ GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Demonstrat­ors in Chicago last year protest proposed changes to the Affordable Care Act.
SCOTT OLSON/ GETTY IMAGES FILES Demonstrat­ors in Chicago last year protest proposed changes to the Affordable Care Act.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States