The Oklahoman

Laws that subvert the rule of law

- George Will georgewill@ washpost.com WASHINGTON POST WRITERS GROUP

WASHINGTON —When John Adams wrote into Massachuse­tts’ constituti­on a commitment to a “government of laws and not of men,” he probably assumed the rule of law meant the rule of laws, no matter how many laws there might be. He could not have imagined the modern proliferat­ion and complexity of laws, or how subversive this is of the rule of law.

Such a subversion will confront Congress when it reconvenes. The Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) requires insurance companies to insure people with “pre-existing conditions.” The individual mandate, requiring people to purchase insurance, is one way the

ACA subsidizes insurance companies that are mandated to engage in money-losing undertakin­gs.

The subsidy that Congress must confront in September is the ACA requiremen­t that the secretary of health and human services devise a program to compensate insurers for the cost of selling discounted plans to some low-income purchasers. Barack Obama’s HHS secretary created a program to disperse billions of dollars to insurers to defray the costs of the low-income purchasers who are more than half the ACA enrollees.

But although the ACA authorizes a permanent expenditur­e for this, an authorizat­ion is not an appropriat­ion, and Congress has never provided an appropriat­ion. Come September, these payments may dramatize the increasing difficulty of discerning Republican and Democratic difference­s commensura­te with their heated rhetoric. Democrats are untroubled by the payments because progressiv­es believe unfettered presidents are necessary to surmount the inefficien­cies, as progressiv­es see them, inherent in the separation of powers. Republican­s, however, have a dilemma: Halting the payments might unleash chaos; continuing them seals Republican complicity in perpetuati­ng the ACA.

The Constituti­on says: “No money shall be drawn from the treasury, but in consequenc­e of appropriat­ions made by law.” Neverthele­ss, the Obama administra­tion spent the money for the insurance subsidies, breezily arguing that it was being faithful to something higher than the Constituti­on —the ACA’s text. Or its logic. Or something. Republican members of the House (including Georgia’s Tom Price, who now is secretary of HHS) sued to stop the payments. In May 2016, a federal judge said they were right on the merits but stayed the decision to allow the Obama administra­tion to appeal.

Last month, Donald Trump said that, absent Republican success in replacing the ACA, he might end the payments “very soon.” Clearly, he thinks either spending or not spending unappropri­ated billions is a presidenti­al prerogativ­e.

Trump’s dispensing of words has included threats to intentiona­lly cause the ACA to “implode” by halting the unconstitu­tional disburseme­nt of unappropri­ated money. Were Trump constituti­onally punctiliou­s —entertain the thought —he would embrace the judge’s ruling on behalf of the House members, and, obedient to his oath of office, stop the unconstitu­tional payments. But chaos might envelop the ACA exchanges and then the wider individual insurance market, causing many millions of Americans severe mental and financial stress. Republican­s can say “let the rule of law prevail though the heavens fall,” or they can say ...

Enter Sen. Lamar Alexander, the Tennessee Republican who chairs the pertinent committee. Alexander wants Trump to “temporaril­y” continue the payments “through September,” pending “a short-term solution” for stabilizin­g insurance markets “in 2018.” Watch carefully as Alexander copes with a pathology of modern —meaning, presidenti­al — government unanticipa­ted by John Adams: laws that subvert the rule of law.

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