This is going to get interesting.  If this goes badly for Obama (in either 
direction :-P), it will totally dominate the presidential election...

-- Ernie P.

http://motherjones.com/mojo/2012/03/obamacare-supreme-court-decision-explained

What the Supreme Court Could Do About Obamacare, Explained

Pete Marovich/ZUMA Press
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments concerning the constitutionality of 
Obamacare—a.k.a. the Affordable Care Act, or ACA—beginning Monday. (Last week, 
Obama reelection campaign manager Jim Messina sent out an email to supporters 
noting that he and the campaign are proud of "Obamacare," thus claiming the 
term from their foes.) What will the justices decide? Here are a few of the 
probable scenarios:

The Supreme Court punts. The first day of oral arguments is devoted to whether 
or not the Tax Anti-Injunction Act, a law that bars legal challenges to taxes 
before anyone actually pays them, applies to the individual mandate—the 
Obamacare provision that levies a tax on individuals who don't purchase health 
insurance and are not otherwise covered by an employer or government program. 
By taking this road and embracing an argument first laid out by Judge Brett 
Kavanaugh, a George W. Bush appointee, the Supreme Court could avoid dealing 
with the constitutionality of the individual mandate until after the 2012 
election. Doing this could make the mandate ultimately more likely to be 
upheld, because the high court would be acknowledging that the mandate is a tax 
and falls under the federal government's constitutional authority to levy 
taxes. 

"This might end with a whimper rather than a bang," says Adam Winkler, a law 
professor at the University of California–Los Angeles. "If the court rules that 
the Tax Anti-Injunction Act applies, then all of the hullabaloo will be for 
naught."

The Supreme Court tosses out the whole law. Conservative opponents of the ACA 
argue that the individual mandate—only one provision of the law, albeit a 
central one—is an unconstitutional assertion of federal power, and they insist 
it ought to be struck down. But they also want to see the whole law ruled 
unconstitutional. Aside from the individual mandate, conservatives are also 
challenging the constitutionality of expanding Medicaid to 16 million more 
Americans. By the White House's numbers, that's about half of the Americans who 
will ultimately get coverage under the ACA. In his brief, former Solicitor 
General Paul Clement, who will be arguing for the ACA's challengers before the 
court, suggested that if either the individual mandate or the Medicaid 
expansion are ruled unconstitutional then the entire law should go. As TPM's 
Brian Beutler points out, it doesn't help that Congress didn't include in the 
original bill a "severability" clause (a traditional legislative provision that 
essentially says that if a portion of a law is struck down, the rest of the 
legislation still stands). This makes it easier for opponents to argue the 
entire law should be scrapped.

If the court doesn't rule on the individual mandate, however, that still leaves 
the question of whether the ACA's Medicaid expansion is constitutional. But 
experts speculate the court is unlikely to leave the mandate alone but overturn 
the health care law based on the Medicaid expansion.

The Supreme Court tosses the mandate and the ban on discrimination on the basis 
of preexisting conditions. The ban on insurance companies refusing to cover 
individuals on the basis of preexisting conditions is arguably the most popular 
part of the Affordable Care Act. Nevertheless, the Obama administration has 
argued that if the high court should choose to strike down the individual 
mandate, the whole bill wouldn't have to go. But, the government also notes, 
the prohibition on insurance companies discriminating on the basis of 
preexisting conditions would have to be dumped, because without the mandate the 
law's other provisions would "create a spiral of higher costs," with 
individuals getting sick and enrolling at the last minute. "The federal 
government's position is that [if] the mandate goes, other important things go 
too," says Doug Kendall of the Constitutional Accountability Center. 

The Supreme Court strikes down the individual mandate and keeps everything 
else. Neither the conservative challengers to the law nor the Obama 
administration would be particularly happy with this outcome. It would leave 
the current law mostly intact. But it would also, administration officials 
fear, bankrupt the insurance companies still forced to provide coverage without 
the necessary financial resources to do so. (Without a mandate, the insurance 
industry will have fewer customers and less resources to handle an influx of 
those people with preexisting conditions.) However, during the five and a half 
hours of oral arguments, the high court will also be hearing from H. Bartow 
Farr III, who will be arguing for the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals' position 
that the court doesn't have to strike down anything other than the individual 
mandate, if the court finds it unconstitutional.

The Supreme Court upholds the entire law. In the post-Bush v. Gore era, where 
the justices' opinions often seem to reflect little more than the ideological 
positions of the parties that appoint them, it seems difficult to imagine that 
the Affordable Care Act fully survives. But it could happen. George Washington 
University Law School Professor Orin Kerr, a former clerk for Justice Anthony 
Kennedy, is pretty bullish on the ACA's chances. Last August, he predicted that 
"the mandate will be upheld by a vote of anywhere from 6-3 to 8-1." 

Something crazy happens. The above scenarios seem like the most likely 
outcomes. But this is a historic case, and it's possible that the court could 
fail to find consensus one way or the other, leading to the justices splitting 
in a way that no position ends up with a clear majority. It's unlikely, but 
anything could happen.


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