See this story on the above, where the 2 regressive judges on a 3-judge panel voted to deny subsidies to those insured on the federal exchanges under Obamacare. The 3rd judge wrote a dissent destroying their faux reasoning, obviously influenced by their regressive hatred of Obamacare. I'll copy the entire dissent below, as it's short and accurate. The Administration will ask for the full 11-member DC circuit court judgment, which they'll likely win given its 7 Democrat and more reasonable-minded members who actually take precedent into account rather than legislating from the bench. No doubt dissenting judge Edwards' rationale will prevail, as follows:
This case is about Appellants’ not-so-veiled attempt to gut the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (“ACA”). The ACA requires
every State to establish a health insurance “Exchange,” which “shall be a
governmental agency or nonprofit entity that is established by a
State.” 42 U.S.C. § 18031(b)(1), (d)(1). The Department of Health and
Human Services (“HHS”) is required to establish “such Exchange” when the
State elects not to create one. Id. § 18041(c)(1).
Taxpayers who
purchase insurance from an Exchange and whose income is between 100%
and 400% of the poverty line are eligible for premium subsidies. 26
U.S.C. § 36B(a),(c)(1)(A). Appellants challenge regulations issued by
the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) and HHS making these subsidies
available in all States, including States in which HHS has established
an Exchange on behalf of the State. In support of their challenge,
Appellants rely on a specious argument that there is no “Exchange
established by the State” in States with HHS-created Exchanges and,
therefore, that taxpayers who purchase insurance in these States cannot
receive subsidies.
As explained below, there are three critical
components to the ACA: nondiscrimination requirements applying to
insurers; the “individual mandate” requiring individuals who are not
covered by an employer to purchase minimum insurance coverage or to pay a
tax penalty; and premium subsidies which ensure that the individual
mandate will have a broad enough sweep to attract enough healthy
individuals into the individual insurance markets to create stability.
These components work in tandem. At the time of the ACA’s enactment, it
was well understood that without the subsidies, the individual mandate
was not viable as a mechanism for creating a stable insurance market.
Appellants’
proffered construction of the statute would permit States to exempt
many people from the individual 2 mandate and thereby thwart a central
element of the ACA. As Appellants’ amici candidly acknowledge, if
subsidies are unavailable to taxpayers in States with HHS-created
Exchanges, “the structure of the ACA will crumble.” Scott Pruitt,
ObamaCare’s Next Legal Challenge, WALL ST. J., Dec. 1, 2013. It is
inconceivable that Congress intended to give States the power to cause
the ACA to “crumble.”
Appellants contend that the phrase “Exchange
established by the State” in § 36B unambiguously bars subsidies to
individuals who purchase insurance in States in which HHS created the
Exchange on the State’s behalf. This argument
fails because “the words of a statute must be read in their context and
with a view to their place in the overall statutory scheme.” Nat’l Ass’n
of Home Builders v. Defenders of Wildlife, 551 U.S. 644, 666 (2007)
(internal quotation marks
omitted). When the language of § 36B is viewed in context – i.e., in
conjunction with other provisions of the ACA – it is quite clear that
the statute does not reveal the plain meaning that Appellants would like
to find.
Because IRS and HHS have been delegated authority to
jointly administer the ACA, this case is governed by the familiar
framework of Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984). Under Chevron, if “the statute is silent or
ambiguous with respect to the specific issue,” we defer to the agency’s
construction of the statute, so long as it is “permissible.” Id. at 843.
The Government’s permissible interpretation of the statute easily
survives review under Chevron. The Act contemplates that an Exchange
created by the federal government on a State’s behalf will have
equivalent legal standing with State-created Exchanges. 42 U.S.C. §
18041. And the ACA would be self-defeating if taxpayers who purchase
insurance from an HHS-created Exchange are deemed ineligible to receive
subsidies.
Appellants’ argument cannot be squared with the clear legislative scheme established by the statute as a whole.
Apparently
recognizing the weakness of a claim that rests solely on § 36B,
divorced from the rest of the ACA, Appellants attempt to fortify their
position with the extraordinary argument that Congress tied the
availability of subsidies to the existence of State-established
Exchanges to encourage States to establish their own Exchanges. This
claim is nonsense, made up out of whole cloth. There is no credible
evidence in the record that Congress intended to condition subsidies on
whether a State, as opposed to HHS, established the Exchange. Nor is
there credible evidence that any State even considered the possibility
that its taxpayers would be denied subsidies if the State opted to allow
HHS to establish an Exchange on its behalf.
The majority opinion
ignores the obvious ambiguity in the statute and claims to rest on
plain meaning where there is none to be found. In so doing, the majority
misapplies the applicable standard of review, refuses to give deference
to the IRS’s and HHS’s permissible constructions of the ACA, and issues
a judgment that portends disastrous consequences. I therefore dissent.
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