This is an update of an article originally posted in September.
With the Supreme Court due to hear arguments this week on a case brought by a number of Republican state attorneys general that could throw out the entire health care law, and with conservatives now having a 6-3 majority on the Supreme Court, there is great concern among ACA/Obamacare supporters that this could well mean the end of the health care law.
The
Obamacare case currently before the court deals with the 2017 repeal
of the law's tax penalty enforcing the individual mandate for people to buy health insurance
coverage. In 2012, Chief Justice John Roberts cast the deciding vote
in the 5-4 decision upholding Obamacare generally, and the
individual mandate specifically, as valid under the Congress' taxing
power. After the mandate's tax penalty was repealed in 2017, a number of Republican state
attorneys general sued, arguing that since the
mandate was no longer tied to a specific tax penalty, it had lost its
legal underpinning. They also argued that because the individual mandate
was key to a number of the law's provisions that made it a workable
system of insurance, the entire law
should fall, including preexisting
conditions protections.