Thursday, June 28, 2012
Triple COA
Brilliant.
No we see why lawyers get to charge so much. The U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling gives both major parties something to crow about – and saves the Court’s reputation at the same time.
With the majority opinion that the individual must buy health insurance or pay a penalty is essentially taxation, and that taxes, of course, are constitutionally OK, saves the health care law. The time and effort President Obama and others spent on getting it passed wasn’t wasted, or so they will be able to say.
But conservatives have argued all along that it’s a not-so-hidden tax, and the only way you avoid it is by buying health insurance from private suppliers. Which means, the only way to get rid of it, the commentators say, is to elect Mitt Romney and make both the House and Senate Republican in the November election. Far from ending the debate on this issue, the Court’s ruling throws a little gasoline on the fire.
According to the reports, the deciding vote on the Court was cast by Chief Justice John Roberts. So now, the court gets to say, see, we’re not the ee-vil reactionaries you’ve been thinking we are (or at least Roberts gets to say that).
I’ve always thought the general principles of the law are a good thing, and that it solves quite a few problems, but not enough. There’s nothing in it about tort reform – and there should be. It remains to be seen how effective the regulations on transparency will be at holding down health care costs. I have my doubts.
For now, though, the Supreme Court’s ruling may not quite be a perfect game, but it’s definitely a political triple play.
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