I feel compelled to comment on the Supreme Court’s latest Obamacare decision, though I could sum up my reaction with one word: disgust.
- I’m disgusted that we had politicians who decided in 2009 and 2010 to further screw up the healthcare system with Obamacare.
- I’m disgusted the IRS then decided to arbitrarily change the law in order to provide subsidies to people getting insurance through the federal exchange,
even though the law explicitly says those handouts were only supposed to go to those getting policies through state exchanges (as the oily Jonathan Gruber openly admitted).
- I’m disgusted that the lawyers at the Justice Department and the Office of White House Counsel didn’t have the integrity to say that handouts could only be given to people using state exchanges.
- But most of all, I’m disgusted that the Supreme Court once again has decided to put politics above the Constitution.
In theory, the courts play a valuable role in America’s separation-of-powers system. They supposedly protect our freedoms from majoritarianism. And they ostensibly preserve our system of checks and balances by preventing other branches of the federal government from exceeding their powers.
To be sure, the courts – including and especially the Supreme Court – have not done a good job in some areas. Ever since the 1930s, for instance, they’ve completely failed to limit the federal government to the enumerated powers in Article 1, Section 8, of the Constitution.
The Supreme Court’s first Obamacare decision back in 2012 then took that negligence to a higher level.
Now we have a second Obamacare decision. And this one may be even more outrageous because the Supreme Court decided to act as a pseudo-legislature by arbitrarily re-writing Obamacare.
Here’s what George Will wrote about the decision.
The most durable damage from Thursday’s decision is not the perpetuation of the ACA, which can be undone by what created it — legislative action. The paramount injury is the court’s embrace of a duty to ratify and even facilitate lawless discretion exercised by administrative agencies and the executive branch generally. …The decision also resulted from Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.’s embrace of the doctrine that courts, owing vast deference to the purposes of the political branches, are obligated to do whatever is required to make a law efficient, regardless of how the law is written. What Roberts does by way of, to be polite, creative construing (Justice Antonin Scalia, dissenting, calls it “somersaults of statutory interpretation”) is legislating, not judging. …Thursday’s decision demonstrates how easily, indeed inevitably, judicial deference becomes judicial dereliction, with anticonstitutional consequences. We are, says William R. Maurer of the Institute for Justice, becoming “a country in which all the branches of government work in tandem to achieve policy outcomes, instead of checking one another to protect individual rights.
Here’s the bottom line, from Will’s perspective.
The Roberts Doctrine facilitates what has been for a century progressivism’s central objective, the overthrow of the Constitution’s architecture. The separation of powers impedes progressivism by preventing government from wielding uninhibited power.
Here’s how my Cato colleagues reacted, starting with Michael Cannon, our healthcare expert whose heroic efforts at least got the case to the Supreme Court.
…the Supreme Court allowed itself to be intimidated. …the Court rewrote ObamaCare to save it—again. In doing so, the Court has sent a dangerous message to future administrations… The Court today validated President Obama’s massive power grab, allowing him to tax, borrow, and spend $700 billion that no Congress ever authorized. This establishes a precedent that could let any president modify, amend, or suspend any enacted law at his or her whim.
Now let’s look at the responses of two of Cato’s constitutional scholars. Roger Pilon is less than impressed, explaining that the Roberts’ decision is a bizarre combination of improper deference and imprudent activism.
With Chief Justice Roberts’s opinion for the Court, therefore, we have a perverse blend of the opposing positions of the judicial restraint and activist schools that reigned a few decades ago. To a fault, the Court today is deferential to the political branches, much as conservatives in the mold of Alexander Bickel and Robert Bork urged, against the activism of the Warren and Burger Courts. But its deference manifests itself in the liberal activism of a Justice Brennan, rewriting the law to save Congress from itself. As Scalia writes, “the Court forgets that ours is a government of laws and not of men.”
And Ilya Shapiro also unloads on this horrible decision.
Chief Justice Roberts…admits, as he did three years ago in the individual-mandate case, that those challenging the administration are correct on the law. Nevertheless, again as he did before, Roberts contorts himself to eviscerate that “natural meaning” and rewrite Congress’s inartfully concocted scheme, this time such that “exchange established by the state” means “any old exchange.” Scalia rightly calls this novel interpretation “absurd.” …as Justice Scalia put it, “normal rules of interpretation seem always to yield to the overriding principle of the present Court: The Affordable Care Act must be saved.” …like three years ago, we have a horrendous bit of word play that violates all applicable canons of statutory interpretation to preserve the operation of a unpopular program that has done untold damage to the economy and health care system.
Now I’ll add my two cents, at least above and beyond expressing disgust. But I won’t comment on the legal issues since that’s not my area of expertise.
Instead I’ll have a semi-optimistic spin. I wrote in 2013 that we should be optimistic about repealing Obamacare and fixing the government-caused dysfunctionalism (I don’t think that’s a word, but it nonetheless seems appropriate) of our healthcare system.
This latest decision from the Supreme Court, while disappointing, doesn’t change a single word of what I wrote two years ago.
P.S. Since today’s topic (other than my conclusion) was very depressing, let’s close by looking at something cheerful.
I’ve commented before that America has a big advantage over Europe because of a greater belief in self-reliance and a greater suspicion of big government.
Well, now we have further evidence. Here’s some polling data from AEI’s most recent Political Report. As you can see, there’s a much stronger belief in self-sufficiency in the United States than there is in either Germany or Italy.
Polling data like this is yet another sign of America’s superior social capital.
And so long as Americans continue to value freedom over dependency, then there’s a chance of fixing the mess in Washington. Not just Obamacare, but the entire decrepit welfare state.
[…] I mentioned the horrid Wickard V. Filburn case. The Obamacare decision may be even […]
[…] I mentioned the horrid Wickard V. Filburn case. The Obamacare decision may be even […]
[…] Section 8, that gives Washington the power to mandate the purchase of health insurance (though that awful decision by Chief Justice John Roberts looks brilliant compared to the even-worse 1942 decision that gave Washington the power to control […]
[…] And once the Supreme Court acquiesced to this perversion of the Constitution’s clear intent, any limits of federal power were swept away (evinced most recently by John Roberts’ tortured Obamacare decision). […]
[…] the way, the Obamacare case may be as odious as Wickard v. Filburn since it marked another unfortunate expansion of Washington’s ability […]
[…] sought to expand a president’s power to unilaterally change policy, but I feel confident that even John Roberts and the rest of the Supreme Court would intervene to prevent unilateral tax increases and […]
[…] bad the Supreme Court, most recently with Obamacare, has failed in its job to protect economic […]
[…] many people (include the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court) don’t share my […]
[…] P.P.P.S. I image Levy/Mellor book would be re-titled The Dirty Thirteen if it was updated to include the horrific Obamacare decision. […]
[…] when we got a bunch of bad policies, including resuscitation of the corrupt Export-Import Bank, another Supreme Court Obamacare farce, expanded IMF bailout authority, and busted spending […]
[…] bad Judge Friedman wasn’t sitting in for Justice John Roberts when the Obamacare case was (wrongly) […]
[…] the Supreme Court no longer protects our economic liberties (John Roberts providing the most recent example), but it was nice while it […]
[…] the Supreme Court no longer protects our economic liberties (John Roberts providing the most recent example), but it was nice while it […]
[…] confirmation of Justice Gorsuch also bodes well (assuming he doesn’t “grow in office” like Justice Roberts). Trump Grade: […]
[…] P.S. Never forget that we wouldn’t be in this mess if John Roberts had upheld his oath and ruled that Obamacare was unconstitutional. […]
[…] P.S. Never forget that we wouldn’t be in this mess if John Roberts had upheld his oath and ruled that Obamacare was unconstitutional. […]
[…] that was explicitly designed to protect against majoritarianism. The problem is justices who put politics first and the Constitution […]
[…] worked reasonably well until the 1930s. Now we’ve gone so far in the other direction that the Supreme Court says Washington can compel us to buy things from cronyist […]
[…] of Justice Gorsuch also bodes well (assuming he doesn’t “grow in office” like Justice Roberts). Trump Grade: […]
[…] John Roberts (aka, the reincarnation of Justice Roberts) put politics above the Constitution by providing the decisive vote in the Supreme Court decision that upheld Obamacare. If the law had been blocked before the handouts began, we wouldn’t be […]
[…] that Brazil doesn’t have a Supreme Court Justice like John Roberts who will somehow make a politicized decision and sabotage the new spending […]
[…] the Supreme Court ceded its role of protecting economic liberty (with John Roberts a few years ago providing the icing on the cake of untrammeled government […]
[…] size and power further expanded during the grim LBJ-Nixon years. And, more recently, we witnessed the debacle of a Supreme Court ruling that the very limited enumerated powers in the Constitution somehow give the federal government the […]
[…] size and power further expanded during the grim LBJ-Nixon years. And, more recently, we witnessed the debacle of a Supreme Court ruling that the very limited enumerated powers in the Constitution somehow give the federal government the […]
[…] notwithstanding the elastic anti-constitutional gymnastics of Chief Justice John Roberts, nothing about mandating the purchase of government-approved health […]
[…] he condemn Chief Justice John Roberts and the Supreme Court for deciding that the “power to tax” somehow gave the federal government the authority to force citizens to buy government-approved health insurance […]
[…] Supreme Court ignores law to bail out Obamacare (again) – Back in 2012, the Supreme Court had a chance to rule whether Obamacare was an impermissible expansion of the power of the federal government. In a truly odious decision, Chief Justice John Roberts ignored the Constitution’s limits on federal powers and decided we could be coerced to buy health insurance. Last year, he did it again, this time by bailing out a key part of Obamacare by deciding to arbitrarily ignore the wording of the law. […]
[…] the IRS disregarded legislative text and arbitrarily rewrote the Obamacare legislation to enable additional […]
[…] the IRS disregarded legislative text and arbitrarily rewrote the Obamacare legislation to enable additional […]
[…] the IRS disregarded legislative text and arbitrarily rewrote the Obamacare legislation to enable additional […]
[…] And once the Supreme Court acquiesced to this perversion of the Constitution’s clear intent, any limits of federal power were swept away (evinced most recently by John Roberts’ tortured Obamacare decision). […]
[…] In other words, it’s not good for prosperity when a nation begins to have problems such as protectionism and politicized courts. […]
[…] as we saw when it imposed a regulation that put foreign tax law above American tax law. And when it arbitrarily rewrote the Obamacare legislation to enable additional […]
[…] as we saw when it imposed a regulation that put foreign tax law above American tax law. And when it arbitrarily rewrote the Obamacare legislation to enable additional […]
[…] https://danieljmitchell.wordpress.com/2015/06/26/obamacare-and-the-odious-anti-constitutionalism-of-… […]
[…] https://danieljmitchell.wordpress.com/2015/06/26/obamacare-and-the-odious-anti-constitutionalism-of-… […]
Reblogged this on Public Secrets and commented:
I was going to write a long post about the three rotten Supreme Court decisions in two days at the end of this week –Obamacare, “Disparate impact,” and gay marriage (I support SSM, but Kennedy’s opinion is a judicial farrago.), but Dan sums it all up quite nicely for me, even though he’s only talking about Obamacare.
[…] Obamacare and the Odious Anti-Constitutionalism of Chief Justice John Roberts […]
The oath of office for the Supreme Court justices is “I, _________, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States …”.
.
They are not swearing an oath to protect Congress from its failures or to protect the Executive from wandering off the prescribed path or to protect the people from the vagaries of either/both. Their only allegiance is the Constitution. But they don’t seem to get it.
The time has come to dismiss this government (all of its actors) and establish a new republican (small “r”) government as set forth by the Nation’s founders. Those who oppose are welcome to swim to another homeland or get/accept free room and board as a political prisoner in federal prison or Gitmo. Court cases, individual or class, will not be entertained as the courts apparently are unfamiliar with the law. (It used be King George III’s robe we despised, now it judges’ robes in general, supreme robes in particular.)
There is no solution to the current fed.gov, only extinguishment; otherwise a new era of slavery has unfolded.
The D.C. bar should disbar the Chief Justice for fraudulently representing that he knows the law, will abide by it, will enforce it and the Constitution. res ipsa loquitor. ©2015
PPS. BTW, enjoy it while it lasts. You too can ride the Obamacare train. Just make sure your children build their 401Ks outside America.
It is virtually impossible to protect freedom from majoritarianism in a rational secular way.
Constitutions and other similar pacts are, after all, agreements between people, supported by people, and once drafted by people. These legal constructs are certainly better than nothing, but they only add inertia to the arbitrariness of majoritarianism; they cannot hold it back for a protracted period of time. They are general pacts that say that you will not ban my blue pants and I will not make you wear purple earrings. But when people want purple earrings for a protracted period of time, and start feeling safe that they will never like blue pants, then your blue pants get sold to buy purple earrings; constitution pushed aside, reinterpreted as a new pact.
If a constitution impedes majoritarianism on a certain issue for a protracted period of time, then the people will overturn the constitution or push it aside. This is what you are witnessing.
And it is correct for constitutions to be plastic. Otherwise we would end up blindly following anachronisms. It is just sad though when a pact that led a country into the greatest ever prosperity (US) gets bamboozled into the moral framework of a slow growth declining continent (EU).
The only other major moral vehicle that transcends majoritarianism is religion. Though I’m not personally religious, in my view, religion plays a major role in national success and prosperity. Those nations that pick the right religions prosper. Not coincidentally, Judaism is the religion closest related to capitalism and free markets. By the same logic, secular democracies seem to be on a bad path (remember that under sub-par growth nothing is sustainable at the end) as they fall for majoritarianism and voter-lemmings have innate tendency towards coercive collectivism. Tendency baked into their genes from times primordial when the world was static and the best recipe for success was to take the wisdom of the past, follow it, and impose it on the few unwilling. This approach is suboptimal in a fast moving world, and those who practice it grow at half the world average, or less.
When you are in the secrecy of your voting booth who is going to prevent you from marking that X that enables you to live off the efforts of another person (as long as it lasts, that is) if not religion, or membership in the small loony minority of libertarians?
The bottom line is that,
There little no cure to living in a place where voters have turned into lemmings. This is why the world is ultimately Darwinian and most voter-lemming nations end up taking wrong turns and end up on dead evolutionary branches.
Voter-lemmings are into an inexorable process of flattening the effort-reward curve. They have already started, and will continue now ever more, voting like Europeans.
They will decline.
Nothing can ultimately escape sub par growth. It first dismantles your prosperity, then your power, your culture your religion, eventually everything falls. Gone, pushed aside by more successful and efficient moral frameworks, marginalized, forgotten into the dustbin of history.
At a personal level, there is only one cure that is emerging in our 21st century world: Mobility.
Pick the freest places to live. And leave the lemmings behind as they build their paradise. At a structural growth rate that is half the world average, it is obvious where that paradise is headed.
Tic-tok tic-toc with every passing day, the immovable compounding power of subpar growth drives American standard of living into the middle-income countries.
The malaise of decline has started. “What shall we do? We need help! Let’s flatten the effort-reward curve some more! ” Trading small short term redistribution gains for less dynamism and meager long term growth — The vicious cycle closes.
PS. Obamacare will not be repealed. More likely, it will be rewritten. Rewritten in a way that flattens the effort-reward curve even more. Once down this path (which started before obamacare) there is no return. Only decline. But the bottom is long ways off. It will be a protracted painful ride down. Sometimes slow and steady erosion of world prosperity ranking by subpar growth, sometimes relatively stable with more abrupt stepwise declines in between.
[…] robust reaction from Dan Mitchell‘s International Liberty blog at […]