Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

GOP suggests Supreme Court might not strike down all of ‘Obamacare’ after challenge

- By Jennifer Haberkorn Jennifer Haberkorn covers Congress for the Los Angeles Times.

WASHINGTON -- As health care plays an increasing­ly prominent role in the closing days of the 2020 election, Republican­s are trying to raise doubts in voters’ minds that a GOPbacked lawsuit asking the Supreme Court to strike the entire Affordable Care Act will actually succeed.

Judge Amy Coney Barrett, President Donald Trump’s nominee to the Supreme Court, fueled that effort during her confirmati­on hearing last week.

She repeatedly suggested in response to Republican­s’ questions that despite her past criticisms of the 2010 law, she may not support striking the entire law, one of the only issues on which she came close to offering a view of her thinking.

The campaign by congressio­nal Republican­s to downplay health care fears belies a decadelong GOP effort to repeal the law known as Obamacare, including two previous Supreme Court challenges that failed.

The third major effort is to be heard a week after the election and could be the first argument with Judge Barrett on the court. GOP-led states and the Trump administra­tion are arguing that the entire law including the popular protection­s for people with preexistin­g medical conditions should be wiped off the books because one provision is no longer valid.

While Republican­s in Congress have not formally joined the latest lawsuit, they have a long history of voting to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

Now with the election closing in and polls suggesting Democrats are ahead in many races, Republican­s are struggling to convince voters that the Supreme Court won’t do exactly what the Trump administra­tion is asking it to do.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said last week in a debate that “no one believes the Supreme Court is going to strike down” the health care law. In a Montana debate last month, Republican Sen. Steve Daines cited “experts” who say it is “highly unlikely” the Supreme Court will overturn the Affordable Care Act.

Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., was more blunt, calling the idea that Judge Barrett would support a ruling eliminatin­g the health care law “prepostero­us.”

Democrats argue that Judge Barrett’s appointmen­t will make it more likely that the law is struck down, pointing to her past skeptical comments on Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.’s two opinions upholding the law. She said during the hearing that those criticisms are irrelevant to the current case because the issues are different.

Sen. Charles E. Grassley of Iowa said last month that he has “doubt” that the law will be struck down “whether (Judge Barrett) is on the court or not,” according to the Cedar Rapids Gazette.

The popularity of the health care law, particular­ly its requiremen­t that

insurance companies accept anyone, regardless of their preexistin­g conditions, has reemerged as a possible vulnerabil­ity for Republican­s. Democrats, who won control of the House on the issue in 2018, have returned to health care, using the Supreme Court confirmati­on hearing as their platform. They charge that Mr. Trump wants Judge Barrett confirmed by the Nov. 10 argument to ensure that she will vote against the law.

Since the Republican Party’s 2017 unsuccessf­ul repeal effort, GOP lawmakers have embraced the idea of the law’s protection­s for people with preexistin­g medical conditions, but not the policy as it is written.

Democrats “assert everyone with preexistin­g conditions is going to be denied health care and people will be dying in the streets. And I get that is their reelection message. It’s not actually connected to reality,” said Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas. “Every member of the Senate agrees we are going to protect preexistin­g conditions.”

While there are several Republican ideas on how to address preexistin­g conditions protection­s, the party has not coalesced around a plan to ensure those protection­s would continue if the court were to strike the law. One GOP idea would prevent insurance companies from denying customers with preexistin­g conditions if those customers have maintained consistent insurance coverage. Skeptics of this plan say that if a person drops out of the insurance market, it could be prohibitiv­ely expensive to get back in. Another GOP proposal says insurance companies must accept anyone, but can charge more to women and older adults.

In reviewing the case, the Supreme Court will have to decide whether the law’s requiremen­t that nearly all Americans have insurance -- the socalled individual mandate -- is now invalid because Congress made the penalty $0. If the justices invalidate it, they will then have to determine if the mandate is “severable” from the rest of the law or whether the entire law needs to be taken down. Democrats defending the law say even if the court rules the mandate is unconstitu­tional, the rest of the law can stand.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, who suddenly finds himself in a close reelection contest in South Carolina, explicitly addressed conservati­ve voters in Judge Barrett’s hearing Wednesday on the issue. Mr. Graham asked Judge Barrett to confirm that the most important issue in determinin­g “severabili­ty” is a “presumptio­n to save the statute, if possible” by removing only the offending provision and leaving the rest in place. She agreed.

“So I want every conservati­ve in the nation to listen to what she just said,” Mr. Graham said. “The doctrine of severabili­ty presumes, and its goal is, to preserve the statute if that is possible.”

“Severabili­ty strives to look at a statute as a whole and say: Would Congress have considered this provision so vital that, kind of in the Jenga game, pulling it out, Congress wouldn’t want the statute anymore?” Judge Barrett said.

While Mr. Graham wanted to ensure that the public had the impression that Judge Barrett would not eliminate preexistin­g conditions protection­s, his opposition to the rest of the law is intact.

“We started with five exchanges. We’re down to one. You have one choice. Four rural hospitals have closed,” he said of the law in South Carolina. “Premiums have gone up, not down, by an average of 30%.”

Democrats have been unusually discipline­d in their focus on the health care law in the Barrett hearings. She has refused to weigh in explicitly on how she views the case, outside of the severabili­ty question. But in response to intense questionin­g by Democrats, she said she is not “hostile” to the law.

“I’m not here on a mission to destroy the Affordable Care Act,” she said.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Sen. Lindsey Graham, standing right, talks to Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah., as Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, sits below, before a confirmati­on hearing for Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett before the Senate Judiciary Committee Monday on Capitol Hill in Washington.
Associated Press Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Sen. Lindsey Graham, standing right, talks to Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah., as Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, sits below, before a confirmati­on hearing for Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett before the Senate Judiciary Committee Monday on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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