Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Health care suit a door for Biden

Analysts foresee opportunit­y to strengthen coverage law

- MARK SHERMAN

WASHINGTON — The pending Supreme Court case on the fate of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is the Biden administra­tion’s first opportunit­y to chart a new course in front of the justices.

The health care case, argued a week after the election in November, is one of several matters, along with immigratio­n and a separate case on Medicaid work requiremen­ts, where the new administra­tion could take a different position from the Trump administra­tion at the high court.

While a shift would be in line with President Joe Biden’s political preference­s, it could prompt consternat­ion at the court. Justices and former officials in Democratic and Republican administra­tions routinely caution that new administra­tions should generally be reluctant to change positions before the court.

Justice Elena Kagan, who as solicitor general was the top Supreme Court lawyer for President Barack Obama before he appointed her to the court, said in a 2018 forum that the bar should be high.

“I think changing positions is a really big deal that people should hesitate a long time over, which is not to say that it never happens,” Kagan said at the time. Trump’s Justice Department made a switch four times in the first full high court term of the administra­tion.

Still, the health care case is a good candidate for a rare change of position, said Paul Clement, who was solicitor general under President George W. Bush.

The Justice Department defends federal laws at the Supreme Court “whenever reasonable arguments can be made,” Clement said at an online Georgetown University forum.

The Trump administra­tion called on the justices to strike down the entire Obama-era law under which some 23 million people get health insurance and millions more with preexistin­g health conditions are protected from discrimina­tion. Biden was vice president when the law was enacted.

As president, Biden has called for strengthen­ing the law, and he already has reopened sign-ups for people who might have lost their jobs and the health insurance that goes with them because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In the health care case, the court could rule that the requiremen­t that people obtain insurance or pay a penalty is unconstitu­tional and leave the rest of the law alone.

The Justice Department could simply file a new legal brief saying that its views have changed, former acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal, also an Obama administra­tion veteran, said at the same Georgetown event. A second court hearing is unlikely.

Clement agreed. “I think the justices would welcome it,” he said. “I also think it’s an incredibly strong position.”

Orders issued by Biden in the first week of his presidency also may affect two cases scheduled for argument this month over contentiou­s Trump administra­tion policies involving immigrants.

In one case, Trump was unhappy with the money Congress allotted for constructi­on of a wall along the Mexican border.

Trump declared a national emergency and identified nearly $7 billion appropriat­ed for other purposes to use instead to build sections of the wall.

The case before the Supreme Court involves $2.5 billion in Defense Department funds. Lower courts have ruled against Trump, but the Supreme Court allowed work on the wall to continue while the case made its way through the legal system.

Much of the money has already been spent and Biden rescinded the emergency on his first day in office. The Justice Department could tell the court that there is nothing left for it to decide.

The same might be true of the legal challenge to the Trump policy that forced asylum-seekers to wait in Mexico for U.S. court hearings. Biden has suspended the policy for new arrivals.

A dispute over waivers the Trump administra­tion granted states to impose work requiremen­ts on people who receive their health care through the Medicaid program also could be affected.

Biden on Thursday directed the Health and Human Services Department to review the waivers, but it’s not clear how quickly the administra­tion could act to undo them and whether changes could derail the Supreme Court case.

The waivers were struck down in lower courts, and the states appealed.

By early December, the justices knew a new administra­tion would be in place by the time they heard the case, but they decided to take it on anyway.

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