Are Health-Care Waivers Unconstitutional?
Doug Fiedor 
[email protected] 
 

"Until the legislature changed the law, however, neither the legislature nor 
the executive could simply tell a favored person that he was not bound by it." 
This same rule, of course, would also apply to the illegal alien problem.  Our 
law states that all illegal aliens must be deported.  
 

http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/259101/are-health-care-waivers-unconstitutional-philip-hamburger
or
http://tinyurl.com/47rfcep

February 8, 2011 4:00 A.M.
 
 
Are Health-Care Waivers Unconstitutional?
 
The president cannot simply decide who does and does not have to follow the law.

The constitutional dispute over the health-care law has thus far centered on 
the lawfulness of the statute itself — most dramatically when, last week in 
Florida, a federal judge held the act to be void. Waiting in the wings, 
however, is another constitutional question, one concerning not the statute, 
but waivers from it.

The Department of Health and Human Services has granted 733 waivers from one of 
the statute’s key requirements.  The recipients of the waivers include insurers 
such as Oxford Health Insurance, labor organizations such as the Service 
Employees International Union, and employers such as PepsiCo. This is 
disturbing for many reasons. At the very least, it suggests the 
impracticability of the health-care law; HHS gave the waivers because it fears 
the law will cost many Americans their jobs and insurance.

More seriously, it raises questions about whether we live under a government of 
laws. Congress can pass statutes that apply to some businesses and not others, 
but once a law has passed — and therefore is binding — how can the executive 
branch relieve some Americans of their obligation to obey it?

The dangers of inequity are obvious. Will only corporations and unions get 
waivers, or can individuals also get them? For example, if a family physician 
feels financial pressure under the health-care law to fire one of his 
employees, will he get a waiver to avoid adding to unemployment?

Indeed, can even a small corporation get a waiver? Small businesses provide 
most new jobs, but the answer is obvious: Waivers are mostly, if not entirely, 
for politically significant businesses and unions that get the special 
attention of HHS or the White House.  The rest of us must obey the laws.

As it happens, waivers have a history. In the Middle Ages, the pope granted 
waivers, known as dispensations, and English kings soon followed suit. 
Technically, these grants relied on what were called “non obstante clauses” — 
clauses in which the king specified that, notwithstanding a particular law, the 
recipient of the grant could do as he pleased. Supplementing this dispensing 
power was the suspending power. Whereas a dispensation waived compliance with a 
statute for a particular individual or corporation, a suspension waived 
compliance for everyone.

The underlying justification was that the king had absolute power — a power 
above the law — and this caused consternation. Men had speculated about God’s 
power to perform miracles or otherwise act above His own laws, and it was 
troubling enough that the pope, in imitation of God, excused individuals from 
canon law; but it was even more immediately worrisome that the king now was 
dispensing with statutes and sometimes suspending them, for this suggested that 
he had power above the law of the land. Recognizing the danger, the chronicler 
Matthew Paris in 1251 lamented the introduction of dispensing grants in 
England. These clauses, he complained, amounted to saying, “Notwithstanding any 
old liberty, the matter shall proceed.” This sort of provision allegedly 
provoked a judge — Roger de Thurkeby — to sigh, “Alas! Alas! . . . The civil 
court is now tainted by the example of the ecclesiastical one, and by the 
sulphurous spring the whole river
 is poisoned.”  By the late 17th century, Parliament restricted the suspending 
and dispensing powers. English kings used the suspending and especially the 
dispensing power for theoretically good purposes, such as to ensure religious 
toleration. In acting above the law, however, and thereby freeing others from 
the law, these monarchs revealed the danger of the suspending and dispensing 
powers.

After the Revolution of 1688, in the English Declaration of Rights, Parliament 
declared the royal exercise of either power to be illegal, except where 
authorized by statute. As a result, what nowadays are called “waivers” were 
lawful only by legislative delegation.

Americans went even farther: In their state constitutions, they followed the 
English pattern of recognizing legislative delegation of the power to suspend 
laws, but they entirely rejected the dispensing power. The suspending power 
seemed to be a specialized, temporary type of legislation, and its legislative 
character was so widely accepted that when state constitutions established 
their legislatures, they did not have to spell out that the legislative power 
included a power to suspend. Instead, the state constitutions merely provided 
that the suspending power should never be exercised except by the legislature 
or under its authority — the goal being to leave room for legislative 
delegation of the suspending power to the executive.

Constitutions, however, could take different paths.  Although the U.S. 
Constitution followed the state constitutions in simply assuming that 
suspension was part of the legislative power, it did nothing to authorize 
delegation of the suspending power to the executive.

Even more strikingly, no American constitution, state or federal, allowed 
dispensation, let alone its delegation. Nor should this be a surprise. The 
power to dispense with the laws had no place in a constitution that divided the 
active power of government into executive and legislative powers. The 
dispensing power was not a power to make laws, nor even a power to repeal laws, 
but rather a power to relieve individuals of their obligation under a law that 
remained in effect. It thus was a power exercised not through and under the 
law, but above it.

Of course, after a violation of a statute, the executive could refrain from 
prosecuting the offender or even pardon him. Until the legislature changed the 
law, however, neither the legislature nor the executive could simply tell a 
favored person that he was not bound by it.

Waivers can be used for good purposes. But since the time of Matthew Paris, 
they have been recognized as a power above the law — a power used by government 
to co-opt powerful constituencies by freeing them from the law. Like old 
English kings, the current administration is claiming such a power to decide 
that some people do not have to follow the law. This is dangerous, above the 
law, and unauthorized by the Constitution.

— Philip Hamburger is the Maurice and Hilda Friedman Professor of Law at 
Columbia Law School.
 

 
Check out Doug's website
http://fiedorreport.blogspot.com/






Note: All hate speech has been removed from the above text.

Is the Constitution the Supreme Law of the Land or not?  
  
I GUESS THE SCOTUS HAS ANWERED THAT QUESTION 
  
Is violence the last resort, or does surrender precede it? 



  
Who is George Soros 
http://www.canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/14700  
  
  
How does Obama expect to get re-elected? 
http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=255965 
  
If a link above does not work, cut-and-paste to your browser. 




Please be aware that Barack Hussein Obama’s grandfather was a highly respected 
witch doctor with the Luo tribe. His white grandmother was VP at the Bank of 
Hawaii and she worked with and for Peter Geithner on other projects, Peter is 
the father of Timothy Geithner, Obama's choice of Treasurer of  the US.



  




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