WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court upheld the heart of President Obama's healthcare law Thursday, ruling 5-4 in favor of the requirement that, starting in 2014, individuals either obtain healthcare coverage or pay a tax.
Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. sided with the courtâs four Democratic appointees to uphold the Affordable Care Act, the centerpiece of Obamaâs domestic legislative program.
âWe do not consider whether the Act embodies sound policies. That judgment is entrusted to the Nationâs elected leaders,â Roberts wrote. âWe ask only whether Congress has the power under the Constitution to enact the challenged provisions.â
Although he answered that question in the affirmative, Roberts agreed with the law's conservative critics -- and the courtâs four other conservatives -- who said Congress does not have the power to require people to buy a product such as health insurance.
But, he said, the law does not truly impose such a mandate on Americans. It simply requires those who do not have health insurance to pay a tax penalty. That tax requirement, he said, passes constitutional muster.
"The federal government does not have the power to order people to buy health insurance," he wrote. "The federal government does have the power to impose a tax on those without health insurance."
The justices also upheld a major expansion of the Medicaid program, which is one of the chief ways the law sought to expand coverage of the uninsured. But, they said, the federal government cannot force states to participate. Those states that do not want to expand Medicaid, even if the federal government pays for most of the expansion, will have to be given the right to opt out.
That part of the ruling could open the way for significant differences in healthcare coverage between liberal states, which already have said they welcome the additional federal money for expanded coverage, and conservative ones. Some Republican governors have indicated they want to reject the expanded coverage.
Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, the usual swing vote, joined the other conservative dissenters in a joint opinion arguing that the entire law should have been struck down.
Both the outcome and the lineup surprised many in Washington who had expected Kennedy to be the courtâ s swing vote and for Roberts to side with the courtâs conservative bloc against the law.
During the courtâs oral arguments this spring, Roberts had asked many sharply worded questions that expressed skepticism about whether a mandate to buy health insurance would be constitutional. But although the government in its legal briefs had argued that the taxation power created a basis for upholding the law, that point came up only rarely in the oral arguments.
The tax would start at $95 in 2015 and increase to $695 by 2017. Even at that rate, considerably less than the cost of insurance, it is expected to raise about $4 billion a year to help pay for healthcare coverage.
Democrats had gone to great lengths during the congressional debate over the healthcare law to argue that they were not passing a new tax. And Republicans immediately seized on the courtâs language to tag Obama as a tax raiser.
But for the president and his aides, who had stake d the success of Obama's presidency on passage of the healthcare law, that tax label seemed a small price to pay.
Obama was quick to praise the courtâs decision, going before television cameras at the White House about two hours after the decision to pronounce it âa victory for people all over this country whose lives will be more secure because of this law and the Supreme Courtâs decision to uphold it.â
He listed many of the provisions of the law that have proved popular, including the requirement that insurance companies cover people who have preexisting health conditions, the expansion of prescription drug coverage for the elderly and the federal subsidies designed to help people buy insurance, starting in 2014.
âI know the debate over this law has been divisive. I respect the very real concerns that millions of Americans have shared,â Obama said.
âThe highest court in the land has now spoken. We will continue to implement thi s law. And we'll work together to improve on it where we can. But what we wonât do -- what the country canât afford to do -- is re-fight the political battles of two years ago, or go back to the way things were.â
For a brief moment earlier in the morning, Obama thought he had lost the fight. Although the White House gets an early heads up on most major announcements in Washington, it gets no advance word on Supreme Court decisions. So as the decision hour of 10 a.m. EDT approached, Obama was standing outside the Oval Office, watching television on a four-way split screen showing several cable channels.
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