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1 Iliya Tynan Professor Johnson US Constitutional History 4/28/2011 BRIEF AMICUS CURIAE CHALLENGING THE PATIENT PROTECTION AFFORDABLE CARE ACT 2010 & THE HEALTH CARE AND EDUCATION RECONCILIATION ACT 2010 April 28, 2011 Opening Summary We, the private citizens of New York are collectively challenging The Patient Protection Affordable Care Act of 2010 & The Health Care And Education Reconciliation Act of 2010. Our interests lie in the fear of an ever expanding federal government as well as within the courts who seem to interpret the constitution ever more broadly as to allow for the centralization of greater power within the legislative branch of government. In reference to “ObamaCare”, we feel that it is necessary to put a stop to this kind of extreme legislation now rather than the future. If this kind of legislation is allowed to pass now, it will only solidify the powers of the federal government but will further impede upon the rights of America’s private citizens. These laws will be challenged in the following ways: Argument 1. As States’ Rights 2. The Individual Mandate (Activity vs. Inactivity) 3. Disambiguation of tax/penalty rhetoric 4. The Legal Evolution of the Commerce Clause and its Ramifications 5. Spending Clause Complications 6. As an extension of Medicaid and the Necessary and Proper Clause 2 7. Conclusion States’ Rights: The debate over whether or not the Obama Health Care legislation is beneficial or detrimental to the citizens of the United States is not the issue at hand. Instead, the underlying issue is whether or not the federal government has the power or authority to commandeer state governments to adopt a system which calls for mandatory health care for its residents. This issue goes back to James Madison’s quest for the solution to the “great difficulty”, a solution which would work to “enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place to oblige it to control itself.”1 The solution brought about by the founding fathers was that of Dual Sovereignty. This system empowers the state government with the ability to “control the governed”, while the federal government exists to ensure that state governments do not exceed their bounds as prescribed by the United States Constitution. In theory, what is the result of this governmental structure? A weak federal government and a strong state government which is only limited by the national constitution’s conditions. To further explicate this structure, the tenth amendment dictates that those powers not delegated to the federal government by the constitution are instead given to the individual states. The Founding Fathers’ rationale behind implementing this Dual Sovereignty was to proactively attempt to limit the “risk of tyranny and abuse”. This distinction will be very important to understand infra. as the Health Care Bill’s legality lies in how far the federal government can encroach upon the carte blanche delineated by the constitution to the individual states.2 1 James Madison The Federalist 51. 2 “ORDER GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT”, Roger Vinson, January 31 2011. 3 Individual Mandate (Activity vs. Inactivity): The Obama Health Care Legislation mandates that an overwhelming majority of Americans purchase federally-approved health insurance or pay a monetary “tax”, in the guise of an income; which, in reality, is actually a penalty. Here is why this mandate is unconstitutional: it violates the commerce clause of the US constitution which congress relied on heavily in order to pass this bill. It is an explicit violation of the constitution because Article I sec 8 clause 1, or the Spending Clause does not grant the federal government power to institute penalties on the citizens of the United States, only taxes, duties, imposts and excises. Charles Lane writes in the Washington Post, in reference to the penalty/tax issue that “…one purpose of the Constitution is to prevent government from engaging in politically expedient deception. The modern term, I believe, is "transparency."” Disambiguation of tax/penalty rhetoric: A “Catch-22” arises in labeling the individual mandate as a tax or a penalty. The government does not want to call the individual mandate a tax as Obama has stated. However, this becomes problematic because if it is labeled as a penalty, ObamaCare’s individual mandate would be illegal under the Spending Clause as penalties are not listed under the article, explained Supra. This creates two problems for Obama: (1) Calling it a tax would go against his promise of not raising taxes and (2) this would be a direct tax on something other than what is prescribed by Article I Section 9 Clause 4, amended by the 16th amendment i.e. a tax on the failure to acquire health insurance under ObamaCare. Legal Evolution of the Commerce Clause and its Ramifications: 4 In an interview regarding the misuse of the commerce clause as prescribed by the constitution, John Eastman explains the difference between the Living Constitutionalist and Originalist interpretations of the Constitution. The Living Constitutionalist method for interpreting the words of the Founding Fathers implies that contemporary interpretations will fail at understanding the original intent of the Framers. On the other hand, Originalists look to history and documents left behind by the Founding Fathers such as the federalist papers, to name a few, in order to understand the rationale behind the articles of the Constitution. One of the problems found in the contemporary understanding and use of the commerce clause is interpretation of the word “commerce”. This world has evolved from its colonial denotation of “barter trade” to a connotation pertaining to industrialization, manufacturing, agriculture, and retail sales. During the first hundred years of the Constitution’s inception, however, the Commerce Clause was used in order regulate trade between states since they had often imposed trade barriers. In other words, the commerce clause was a check placed on the individual states’ power to put up trade barriers in order to prevent the threat of war and dissolution of the union between the trading states. This would change during Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal when courts were pressured to accept the expansion of power of the federal government. This would become possible due to an 1824 ruling by Chief Justice Marshall in Gibbons v. Ogden where the power granted to congress by the Commerce Clause was greatly expanded to mean any “commerce” (misuse of the original meaning e.g. operation of a steamboat) that affects more than one state. The power of congress would once again be expanded in 1942 in Wickard v. Filburn. This decision affirmed the Federal Government’s power to regulate activity vs. inactivity, analogous to what the “individual mandate” would call for. It did so by stating that Filburn did not have the 5 right to exceed the amount of wheat grown strictly for his personal use, as opposed to the selling of his wheat which exceeded the quota of wheat as prescribed by law. Wickard was wrongly decided and should be overturned, hopefully eliminating certain other mandated taxes such as Social Security and Medicare for individuals who would choose not to pay into those systems, had they the choice. The only case that came close to delineating the powers of congress via the Interstate Commerce Clause is that of United States v. Lopez in 1995. The decision stated that the federal government did not have the right to “legislate control” over public schools under the Commerce Clause as there was no interstate commerce involved, a step in the direction of the original interpretation the word “commerce”. Unfortunately, in Gonzales V. Raich, No. 03-1454, better known as the Medical Marijuana Case, the Supreme Court affirmed that the federal government still has the right to overturn individual states’ laws, in this case: legalized personal use of medical marijuana by the state of California. This shows how, over the years, the evolving definition of the Commerce Clause, as defined by the Supreme Court, has broadened the Federal Government’s power in reference to regulating individual states’ laws. Simply put, the constitution was drafted in order to establish the powers of the three branches of government. Justice Sandra Day O’Conner explains this in her own words which will be later used by Judge Vinson in his ruling against Obama Health Care Law: Some truths are so basic that, like the air around us, they are easily overlooked. Much of the Constitution is concerned with setting forth the form of our government, and the courts have traditionally invalidated measures deviating from that form. The result may appear "formalistic" in a given case to partisans of the measure at issue, because such measures are typically the product of the era's perceived necessity. But the Constitution protects us from our own best intentions: It divides power among sovereigns and among branches of government precisely so that we may resist the temptation to concentrate power in one location as an expedient solution to the crisis of the day (as Charles Lane noted in the Washington Post 02/3/11). 6 There are many arguments for the implementation of the individual mandate through ObamaCare. One such argument was made by President Obama in a news interview regarding the analogous mandate of automobile drivers having to purchase car insurance. There is a distinct difference, however, between being given the choice to drive an automobile and being forced to pay a penalty under ObamaCare. Individuals are not allowed the choice to opt out of ObamaCare, which forces everyone alive to obtain health insurance. Instead, the rhetoric used in support of ObamaCare falls subject to a slippery slope fallacy which can be seen with the “broccoli example”; the anecdote of the federal government’s power expanding to the point where there are no longer any checks or balances placed upon it which could grant it the power to force Americans to have to eat broccoli. 3 Spending Clause Complications: As mentioned Supra., the Spending Clause does not allow for the Federal Government to institute penalties but rather, the Federal Government only has the right to implement taxes, duties, imposts, and excises. ObamaCare violates the Spending Clause, as well as the precedent set forth by South Dakota v. Dole, which places stricter guidelines on the spending power of Congress. Dole had further instated these four limits: (1) the spending must be for the general welfare; (2) the conditions must be stated clearly and unambiguously; (3) the conditions must bear a relationship to the purpose of the program; and 4) the conditions imposed may not require states “to engage in activities that would themselves be unconstitutional”. Under ObamaCare, the Federal Government is already overstepping its bounds in terms of the limits prescribed by the constitution, i.e. the creation of a penalty. In addition, according to the Dole ruling, “a spending condition cannot be coercive” which is defined as follows: “in 3 Wheat, Weed, and ObamaCare: how the Commerce Clause Makes Congress All-Powerful. John Eastman, Chair in Law at Chapman University School of Law. 7 some circumstances the financial inducement offered by Congress might be so coercive as to pass the point at which ‘pressure turns into compulsion against the states.’ Once again, this is not a tax, but rather a penalty, not a duty imposed on the sale of imports or exports, not an Impost paid under a tariff nor an excise instated for goods bought domestically. ObamaCare does not fit the 4 conditions prescribed by Dole, neither does it avoid the “coercion theory” illegalized by that decision. Extention of Medicaid and the Necessary and Proper Clause It has been argued correctly that ObamaCare is an extension of the Medicaid program as it will require the states to provide health services for those who are under the age of 65 with incomes of up to 133% of the federal poverty level. In order to provide for its residents, states would have to pay huge sums, possibly ones which they would not be able to afford. One response to this is considering why states don’t just raise taxes. The answer is that the states should not have to as prescribed by the ninth and tenth amendments to the Constitution. The ninth amendment invalidates the power of the federal government to enact ObamaCare legislation as it is not granted the power to do so under the Constitution4, “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people”5. Furthermore, the tenth amendment affirms this: “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”6 These two amendments from the Bill of Rights further the claim 4 “ORDER GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT”, Roger Vinson, January 31 2011. 5 Bill of Rights, Amendment Nine. Bill of Rights, Amendment Ten. 6 8 that the federal government has no right to further implement taxes on, or regulate activity of private persons. 7 The issue of the prescriptions provided by the tenth amendment, which are supposed to limit the power of the federal government, can be easily overridden by the Necessary and Proper Clause. These two conflicting pieces of United States law have been at odds for some time. In United States v. Comstock, however, Justice Kennedy set a precedent for certain criteria that would not restrict the Necessary and Proper Clause’s seemingly limitless powers. These are as follows: (1) a case in which the National Government relieves the States of their own primary responsibility to enact laws and policies for the safety and well being of their citizens. See United States v. Morrison , 529 U. S. 598 (2000). (2) A case in which the exercise of national power intrudes upon functions and duties traditionally committed to the State. (Kennedy , J., concurring).8 We can easily see where the federal government is taking over the rights of the states in regards to the “primary responsibility to enact laws and policies for the safety and well being of their citizens”. Furthermore, “national power intrudes upon functions and duties traditionally committed to the State” is an immediate problem faced by states who do not wish to pay for or mandate the economic activity of their citizens. Conclusion To understand where our government went wrong is to understand the unjust centralization of power of the federal government during the New Deal. According to the framers, the federal government was only instituted in order to create a balance of dual sovereignty between the people and state governments; to ensure that the states do not exceed their bounds as prescribed by the constitution. To allow the New Deal decisions which extended 7 8 “ORDER GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT”, Roger Vinson, January 31 2011. Justice Kennedy, concurring opinion US v. Comstock. 9 federal power meant a very slippery slope which extended the federal government’s power to go so far as to impede upon state’s rights which can be clearly seen in the Raich decision. The expansion of the commerce clause was a grave error on the part of the judiciary in Wickard and we are now feeling its repercussions. Perhaps the intentions of ObamaCare are sincere, however, it will only take us further down this slippery slope of further expanding congress’s power which constitution had intended to limit. Therefore we ask that the The Patient Protection Affordable Care Act of 2010 & The Health Care And Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 be struck down in order to preserve our government and way of life.