Baltimore Sun

Md. can protect ACA

What would happen to people with pre-existing conditions if anti-Obamacare litigation succeeds is unclear, but the state can step into the void

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Our view:

Rep. Elijah Cummings says a report he commission­ed from the House Committee on Oversight and Government reform shows that if the Trump administra­tion is successful in its legal assault on key provisions of the Affordable Care Act, nearly 170,000 Marylander­s could see their premiums skyrocket or could be denied coverage altogether. Hundreds of thousands of older adults and women could be subject to premium increases, too, he argues. Not so, says Rep. Andy Harris. The Trump administra­tion may be joining an effort by ACA-loathing states in litigation aimed at gutting protection­s for those with pre-existing conditions, but Maryland law contains backup provisions, so no one here is at risk. So who’s right? The unsettling reality for those whose lives may have been literally saved by the ACA is that it’s up for debate. Maryland did incorporat­e elements of the statute into state law, in particular the prohibitio­n on denying someone a policy because they have a pre-existing condition; excluding specific coverage for a pre-existing condition and forbidding insurers from charging a higher premium because of someone’s health status (known as the community rating provision). But it, like several other states, did so in a way that makes reference to the federal law, and it’s altogether unclear what would happen if that’s declared unconstitu­tional as a result of the GOP lawsuit, known as Texas v. United States.

Sabrina Corlette, a research professor at the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University’s Health Policy Institute who co-authored a Commonweal­th Fund paper on the issue after the Trump administra­tion announced it wouldn’t defend those ACAprovisi­ons in court, said what would happen to Maryland’s law should the plaintiffs succeed in Texas v. United States is up to interpreta­tion. The bi-partisan support for the law in Maryland might make the issue moot here — Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, has defended the ACAand worked with Democrats to shore it up, so it’s likely that his administra­tion would continue to enforce the rules. His opponent, Ben Jealous, could be expected to do the same (unless he’s managed to enact Medicare for All instead). But that’s no guarantee of what some future governor might do, and an insurance carrier could also sue to try to prevent the state from enforcing its law in a post-ACA world.

The issue in Texas v. United States is whether the other provisions of the ACA remain constituti­onal now that Congress, as part of last year’s Trump tax cuts, has zeroed out penalties for individual­s who fail to buy insurance as of Jan. 1, 2019. Those penalties were key to the Supreme Court’s ruling upholding the law, which relied on an interpreta­tion of the mandate as permissibl­e under Congress’ broad taxation powers. Large coalitions of pro- and anti-ACA states are battling it out in that case, and meanwhile, Maryland Attorney General Brian E. Frosh this fall filed a mirror-opposite lawsuit, seeking to get the federal courts to affirmativ­ely declare the law constituti­onal despite the suspension of mandate penalties. Among the arguments he offers Rep. Elijah Cummings recently released a report predicting dire consequenc­es for Marylander­s with pre-existing conditions if litigation against the Affordable Care Act is successful. is that just because the penalty is zero doesn’t mean it still can’t be construed as a tax. After all, many taxes establishe­d by the ACA have been suspended at one point or another, and this one could always be resurrecte­d later.

We have no idea which side will ultimately prevail, particular­ly with Justice Brett “what goes around comes around” Kavanaugh now seated on the Supreme Court. And even if Democrats make big gains in November’s midterm elections — no sure thing — it’s unlikely that they will be able to counter the Republican attacks on the ACA of the last two years. Even if Democrats could get a restoratio­n of the mandate through Congress, they would face a near-certain veto from President Trump.

The response for Maryland is fairly simple: Eliminate the language in the state’s health care statutes that refers to the ACA, and then none of this is an issue. Four other states (Massachuse­tts, Colorado, NewYork and Virginia) already have laws like that. And in order to make the economics of the ACA work — beyond the good Governor Hogan and General Assembly Democrats have already done with the new reinsuranc­e program they enacted this year — Maryland should join the growing number of states with their own individual mandates. Massachuse­tts has had one since before the ACA was enacted, and Washington, D.C., New Jersey and Vermont all enacted their own versions this year. Governor Hogan told The Sun’s editorial board last week that he is “willing to take a look” at that idea, and Mr. Jealous has already endorsed the innovative “down payment plan” Maryland health advocates are pushing that would allow uninsured individual­s to use the penalty they would owe to help purchase coverage.

Maryland doesn’t have to be captive to the whims of the courts, Congress or the president. Republican and Democratic leaders here are committed to making the ACA work, and they should take matters into their own hands.

 ?? AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN ??
AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN

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